FORWARDED From: Fiona Black <[log in to unmask]> Hello everyone: This is a reminder about the special event this Thursday evening (St. Paddy's Day!) on the Future of LIS Education. Details are below. Any of you who are in Halifax that day are very welcome to attend and we look forward to seeing you there. This is the final public event of our academic year and is on a topic reflected in the most recent issue of Feliciter (which has Succession Planning and Education as its theme). Please join our two distinguished guest speakers for a thought-provoking (and fun) evening. All best, Fiona Black The Future of LIS Education DATE: 17 March 2005 PLACE: Great Hall, University Club, Dalhousie University TIME: 7:00 pm Live Irish music, door prizes, refreshments 7:40 pm Public Lecture High quality education for those who manage and provide access to information has never been more important. Should current models of LIS education change to fit rapidly-changing needs? User expectations are increasing in the globalized information economy and, in the broad field of LIS, we need to evaluate our educational objectives and directions. Join two original, inventive thinkers and widely-known educators, Toni Carbo and Brian Cantwell Smith, for an enlightening evening of thought-provoking comments and discussion, flavoured with Irish music and refreshments in honour of St. Patrick's Day. Bring your thoughts on our wonderful field as well as your appetite for a good time. Sponsored by: School of Library and Information Studies, Dalhousie University CLA Student Chapter, School of Library and Information Studies Dalhousie University Libraries Faculty of Management, Dalhousie University Department of Irish Studies, Saint Mary's University ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Biographies: Toni Carbo is Professor, School of Information Sciences and the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Pittsburgh. Dean at SIS from 1986 to 2002 she was selected the first Madison Council Fellow in Library and Information Science at the Library of Congress in 2002. Previous appointments have included Executive Director of the National Federation of Abstracting and Indexing Services in London, England, and Executive Director of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Services in the US. Dr. Carbo has been active in several professional associations, including positions as President of the American Society for Information Science and Technology (ASIST) and the Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE). Among her many honors, she has received the ALISE Award for Professional Contribution to Library and Information Science Education and the ASIST Watson Davis Award for significant contributions to the Association and the profession. Drexel selected her as one of the 100 most distinguished of its 60,000 alumni and she was awarded its Centennial Medal. Brian Cantwell Smith is Dean of the Faculty of Information Studies, University of Toronto. He received his BS, MS. and PhD degrees from MIT, studying in the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. He held senior administrative and research positions at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), followed by academic and administrative positions at Stanford University, University of Indiana at Bloomington and Duke University. Dr. Smith's work is highly multidisciplinary, his scholarly interests ranging from computer science to philosophy and from theory to application. At Indiana University, he was Professor of Cognitive Science and Computer Science, Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, Assistant Director of the Cognitive Science Program, Professor of Informatics and a Fellow of the Center for Social Informatics in the School of Library and Information Sciences, and in his current position he is cross-appointed to the Department of Philosophy, the Department of Computer Science and the Program in Communication, Culture and Information Technology at the University of Toronto at Mississauga. Fiddler Joe Pratt has been playing Irish music for 25 years. His interest in traditional fiddle music has also led him to explore the fiddle music of many lands including the other British Isles, many Scandinavian countries, North America, and of course Cape Breton. Besides playing at many local dances and private functions, Joe is currently performing with the local Texas Swing band "Big Blue". Guitarist/bassist James Jackson is an eclectic musician who has performed in groups of almost every style. From pit orchestras, jazz combos, choirs, and rock bands James enjoys the challenges of every genre. Besides playing regularly with Joe, James performs with the 60's and 70's dance band "The Classics". He is a music educator with the Halifax Regional School Board. LECTURE IS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC AT "NO CHARGE." ALL ARE WELCOME Fiona A. Black, PhD Director School of Library and Information Studies Faculty of Management Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS B3H 3J5 Voice: 902-494-1901 Fax: 902-494-2451 Email: [log in to unmask]