Fall Issue 2002: Contents
Welcome Back
The Ave & The HUB in a Nutshell
Navigating the iSchool Website
Librarians in Fiction
Exploit your learning community
Foreign Mysteries offer a new Flavor
What's in a portfolio? How about this?
Directed Fieldwork on PrimeAnswers Project
Welcome
Back!
Hello new and returning iSchool students! On behalf
of the Silverfish staff, I would like to welcome everyone to the 2002-03
school year. We hope this fall finds you rested, energetic, and eager
to take on whatever adventure and excitement the coming year has to
offer you.
One of my new adventures involves being the senior
editor of the Silverfish. I did not pursue this position. Let me give
you a brief history of how this came to be, and at the same time give
you all fair warning about our ALISS officers. They're evil. Every one
of them. Especially the ALISS president. OK sure, she's a good friend
of mine. And yes, she and the other officers first approached me about
this job at the end of spring quarter 2002. But let me tell you, they
were ruthless, each taking turns to sell me on the idea, compliment
me about my editorial talents past and present, and check with me every
few days to ask if I'd thought about it. They were all sweet as pie,
but I could see the evil lurking underneath their clever facades, like
those aliens masquerading as humans in They Live.
I spent most of the summer thinking about it, deciding
to take this on at the last minute. So here we are putting out the Silverfish's
first ever "welcome back" issue. Most of the content was generated
the week before the beginning of the school year. For those of you already
familiar with the Silverfish, you'll also notice that this year the
Silverfish becomes a monthly newsletter rather than a quarterly. We
are also in the process of restructuring the editorial process.
This is my second attempt as editor of a student publication.
I was editor of the student newspaper at Southern Oregon State College
(now Southern Oregon University) back in 1988-89, when I thought I wanted
to be a newspaper reporter for a living. I can only hope that this endeavor
turns out to be as wildly successful as the first. One year ago, I didn't
even know how to build a website, and now I'm assuming a top position
at an online newsletter. Am I crazy or what? (Thankfully, I don't have
to deal with the online aspect of the Silverfish, just the content.)
I have to admit that like that first editorial experience, I am going
into this one without a clear directive. As professional as we make
ourselves appear, most of the time we're learning as we go along. That's
why we're here.
This is where you all come in. I want to make the Silverfish
fun and participatory. This is not our publication; the Silverfish is
your publication. We are taking an informal approach to soliciting submissions.
We want to read about all your experiences, accomplishments, thoughts,
dreams, pursuits, concerns, issues, advice, tips, book or media reviews,
suggestions, rants, etc. as an iSchool student. Pretty much anything
related to our field, school, or student experience is fair game for
publication. We are counting on you to help us make the Silverfish successful
and interesting. Not only will you receive prestige and the personal
satisfaction of being published, but you'll receive some nice bribes
- errr
incentives! - as well. (We all know as iSchool students
that bribes/incentives, especially chocolate, are vital to successful
publications, presentations, participation, and other activities.) We'll
even worry about the editing and formatting ourselves. Please email
all submissions to:
aliss@u.washington.edu
Please email your submission as Word document attachments.
Any photos should be attached separately rather than inserted into the
Word document. Please be sure to put your name on the document itself,
and not just in the email. And feel free to include suggested photo
captions and headlines. These considerations will be helpful to us and
much appreciated.
Once again, welcome back, and best of luck in your
academic pursuits this year! Oh, and if you happen to see the ALISS
president in the halls, do me a favor and give her a bad time all the
time, won't you? ;)
Michael Harkovitch
Silverfish Senior Editor
The
AVE & The HUB in a Nutshell
By Amanda Hirst
Proper nourishment is essential for peak brain function.
If you notice that your synapses are firing a little slower than usual,
you may want to head to the Ave (University Way) or the HUB (Husky Union
Building) for sustenance. No matter which dietary school of thought
you prescribe to -- fatty fast foods to health foods, herbal to caffeinated
or even bubble tea (which has its own food group), or anything in between
-- there is something to please your palate, calm your cravings and
psyche-up your synapses in the HUB or on the Ave...
FULL STORY
Navigating
the iSchool's website
By Michael Harkovitch
What is the iSchool website, and why should you bookmark
it? Good question! When I started grad school last year, I scrambled
to bookmark everything I would need to get organized and be successful
in the program. Not until my third quarter at the iSchool did I realize
that almost everything I needed was already bookmarked for me. As
a grad student, I am always looking for ways to make my life easier.
I could have kicked myself for not figuring this out earlier... FULL
STORY
Librarians
in fiction
By Beverly Stuart
It occurred to me,
as I was reading the second book within a month that featured a librarian
as one of the main characters, that you don't often see fiction that
features a librarian as one of the main characters... FULL
STORY
Exploit
your learning community
By Danielle Miller
The iSchool offers something that the majority of students
on the campus don't have: A learning community! Exploit it! Here are
some tips to help you get the most out of graduate school... FULL
STORY
Foreign
Mysteries offer a new flavor
By Sue Roberts
Define the task. Brainstorm all possible sources. I
was asked by a friend of a friend to recommend novels for a sociology
class, "Gender, Crime, and Deviance." The course has an international
component to it and the professor wanted mysteries/detective stories
set in other countries. Surely there are more authors who fit the bill
than Agatha Christie. So I passed the request on to my colleagues on
the iChat listserv and found out what great resources library students
are... FULL
STORY
What's
in a portfolio? How about this?
By Michael Harkovitch
Shortly before I started library school, I had a conversation
with one of my mentors at Seattle Public Library. Because of a string
of unfortunate circumstances, SPL had not participated in the Seattle
Gay Pride festivities for two years, missing -- based on my previous
involvement -- a satisfying and valuable outreach experience. I mentioned
to my mentor, Bonita Corliss, that in the absence of our previous organizer,
somebody in the system should pick up the torch. Bonita looked at me
and said, "Why don't you do it, Michael? It's never too early to
begin your first outreach project as a librarian."... FULL
STORY
Directed
Fieldwork on the PrimeAnswers Project
By Drexie Malone
The Summer of 2002 was the first time I was gainfully
employed as an information science student. I was able to use my nursing
background on a wonderful project at the University of Washington Health
Sciences Library (HSL) called PrimeAnswers (PA). The Deputy Director
of the HSL, Deborah Ketchell, and her website team had created an electronic
portal to evidence-based medical information for University of Washington
Primary Care Physicians... FULL
STORY
Submissions
Requested
Are you interested in sharing your knowledge with
the rest of the student body? Have you attended any conferences or taken
an interesting or worthwhile class outside of the department? Would
you care to review nearby bars for us? Send your Silverfish submissions
to aliss@u.washington.edu.
Edited by Michael
Harkovitch
Silverfish Web Design by John
W.N. Buell
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