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| Our online course Fostering an Antiracist Library Culture starts September 28, where you’ll learn how to audit your programs, improve hiring practices, and build more inclusive collections. In this three-week online speaker program and workshop, discover the concrete antiracist actions library leaders are taking to make their libraries more welcoming and inclusive. You’ll explore techniques and tools to make lasting change at libraries. This transformational speaker program and workshop has given thousands of librarians the tools and vision for meaningful change. The live sessions run on Tuesdays, September 28, October 5, and 12, from 2:00-4:30PM ET (recordings available) with an ongoing facilitator-led workshop over three weeks. Don’t miss this opportunity! |
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| | Certificate of Completion Provided 15 PD credits available |
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| | | | Week 1: Tuesday, September 28, 2021, 2:00-4:15PM ET Session 1 | 2:00-2:45PM ET Dismantling White Supremacy in the Library Learn how white supremacy is baked into our institutions and how it manifests on individual and systemic levels in this insightful session. You’ll learn how to spot both explicit and implicit racism and identify white supremacy at work. You will come away with a deeper understanding of how to dismantle white supremacy from your sphere of influence, both within the LIS, and beyond it. Speaker: Andrea Blackman, Chief Diversity Officer, City of Nashville; former Special Collections Division Manager, Nashville Public Library (TN) |
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| | Session 2 | 3:00-3:45PM ET Unpacking and Challenging Implicit Bias Combatting racism and injustice in the information and library sciences requires ongoing commitment and personal investment. Part of this work relies on understanding the ways our individual privilege and biases function interpersonally and within larger systems. In this session, you’ll learn how implicit bias shapes the culture of our libraries, how to make biases visible and therefore addressable, and what your role is in cultivating a welcoming and inclusive environment at your library. You’ll also learn about how to identify stereotypes, microaggressions, and more. Speaker: Tarica LaBossiere, Assistant Public Defender, Broward County Office of the Public Defender, Fort Lauderdale (FL), Member of the American Association of Law Libraries | |
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| | Session 3 | 3:45-4:15PM ET The Equity Landscape in LIS In this session, you’ll learn about some of the most pressing equity, diversity, and inclusion conversations happening in the library and information sciences, including a discussion of Critical Race Theory, trans rights, and more. You’ll hear tips for how to have these conversations with library colleagues, community members, and stakeholders, ensuring that we continue to move the needle on equity in libraries. Speaker: Becky Calzada, Library Services Coordinator, Leander Independent School District (TX), TLA Leg Committee, AASL Director at Large |
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| | Week 2: Tuesday, October 5, 2021, 2:00-4:00PM ET Session 1 | 2:00-2:45PM ET Creating Antiracist Library Programming Learn how to assess your library programs and services and develop a plan of action for the future. We’ll take you through how to audit your current programming, establish a protocol for your audit, and what to do with the results once you have them, in this session designed to help you tackle gaps in your programming and address barriers to access in your community. Speaker: Kimberly Brown-Harden, Community Branch Manager, Indianapolis Public Library (IN) | |
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| | Session 2 | 3:00-3:30PM ET Building Diverse Collections and Displays In this session, an expert librarian will discuss how you can assess the level of equity at your library by conducting regular audits of collections, displays, and ordering. This vital work will help you align offerings to community needs, identify gaps in service, and set benchmarks for equity, inclusion, and diversity. You will learn how to perform a diversity audit, including which salient data points should be included, how to gather the requisite information, how to set goals to address gaps, and how to make diversity and inclusion integral parts of collection management and promotion. Speaker: Speaker: Dontaná McPherson-Joseph, Collection Management Librarian, Oak Park Public Library (IL) | |
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| | Session 3 | 3:30-4:15PM ET Antibias/Antiracist Hiring Practices and Recruitment Creating an antiracist culture at your library must involve consideration of staff culture and hiring practices. In this session, you’ll learn how to develop and implement antiracist/antibias recruitment and hiring practices (including antiracist interviewing and candidate selection), steps to take toward fostering inclusive workplaces, and how to conduct an organizational talent equity audit at your own library. Speakers: Sojourna J. Cunningham, Social Sciences and Assessment Librarian, Boatwright Memorial Library, University of Richmond (VA) Jennifer Stout, Teaching and Learning Librarian, Virginia Commonwealth University Libraries, Richmond (VA) Samantha Guss, Social Sciences Librarian, Boatwright Memorial Library, University of Richmond (VA) | |
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| | Week 3 - Tuesday, October 12, 2021, 2:00-4:00PM ET Session 1 | 2:00-2:45PM ET Engaging Your Local Community in Antiracism Work Learn how connecting with your community and its past can open up rich conversations about the future in this inspiring session. This session will include an exploration of how librarians can use their institutions’ collections and resources to help patrons, students, and community members explore, critically analyze, and combat systemic racism, how librarians can apply an antiracist lens to engaging their communities, and how to use community engagement as a tool to transform their organization into an antiracist one. Speaker: Angel Jewel Tucker, Youth Services Manager, Johnson County Library, Overland Park (KS) |
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| | Session 2 | 2:45-3:15PM ET Antiracism as ROI The more we invest in antiracism, the more we will get out of our libraries. With the stagnation of a workforce that is over 80% white, libraries need to commit to including new voices and perspectives in our spaces. With an influx of new influences, concepts, and processes that BIPOC and other historically underrepresented people bring to the workforce, there will be a great advance in innovative thinking, new ways of doing things and new directions for our libraries. In this session, you’ll learn how antiracism, purely on its ROI, is a great way to go with public resources. Speaker: Max Macias, Independent Librarian |
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| | | Session 3 | 3:30-4:15PM ET How To Create Impactful Change (Or: Doing the Work Even if You’re the Only One Doing It) In this closing session of our course, you’ll learn how to make valuable change from within your sphere of influence, regardless of your institutional support system or lack thereof. You’ll learn practical ways to navigate organizational culture, understand group dynamics, and come away with ideas for where to go next, now that you have the tools you need to dig deeper into cultivating actively antiracist practices at your library. Speaker: Nikhat Jehan Ghouse, Associate Librarian for the Social Sciences and Coordinator of the Diversity Alliance Residency Program, American University (DC) and Organization Development Consultant and Facilitator, Jehan Consulting |
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| | Course Advisory Committee We are grateful to the following library leaders for providing their guidance and recommendations for the course speaker program and curriculum |
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| | Andrea Blackman, Chief Diversity Officer, City of Nashville; former Special Collections Division Manager, Nashville Public Library (TN) |
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| | Robin Bradford, Collection Development Librarian, Pierce County Library System (WA) |
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| | Michelle Khuu, Experiential Learning Specialist, Skokie Public Library (IL) |
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| | Max Macias, Independent Librarian |
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| | | Hadeal Salamah, Hijabi Librarians; Lower and Middle School Librarian, Georgetown Day School, Washington (DC) |
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| | By the end of the course, you’ll have: The tools and background information necessary to audit current library structures, programs, staffing, equity statements, collections, and more through a culturally competent, antiracist lens The ability to assess the inclusiveness of current collection development and RA practices, acquisitions, marketing, plus assessing scheduling practices, branch hours, and staff hiring and retention The ability to recognize common problematic stereotypes, tropes, and microaggressions in media A refresher of key diversity and cultural literacy concepts such as white privilege, unconscious bias, cultural appropriation, and intersectionality Register early and get immediate access to our foundational bonus content—rich supporting materials you can explore at your own pace, including a series of webinars from Library Journal and School Library Journal contributors, readings, activities, and videos! |
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