... school connectedness (i.e. the belief by students that adults and peers in the school care about them as individuals) has been shown to have positive effects on academic achievement, including having higher grades and test scores, having better school attendance, and staying in school longer. CDC Protective Factors
Crafting, making, programming
See inside San Francisco's Lego pop-up bar
Meanwhile, the steady stream of guests flocked to a bar made up entirely of oversized Legos, where bartender Daniel Schmuck poured shaken specialty cocktails into take-home blocks. Across the whole room, an onslaught of color exploded from every direction, the red, blue and yellow primaries standing out bold and bright, in harmony with the vast plastic palette of Lego hues.
The pop-up Lego bar was open for the weekend of April 22-24 at the Mint, a cavernous venue that is worth the visit for simply the spectacle of the building’s Greek Revival design alone. The high ceilings of official California Historical Landmark No. 875 — first opened as a bank in 1874 — made for great acoustics to throw a bash featuring DJ Jesse Lee playing smooth grooves that kept the crowd bobbing its heads and moving. Host and emcee Sam Gleeson weaved through the crowd with a wireless mic, keeping the buzz of the weekend night going with fun facts and Lego trivia with prizes.
Students Lead the Library by Sara Arnold-Garza; Carissa Tomlinson
This title provides case studies of programmes and initiatives that seek student input, assistance, and leadership in the academic library. The book gives practical perspectives and best practices and is useful to libraries seeking to improve their services to students, reach out to new student populations, give students experiential learning opportunities, and even mitigate staffing shortages.
ISBN: 9780838988671
Publication Date: 2016
College student mental health and libraries
Supporting and Caring for Our Gender Expansive Youth, a report from Gender Spectrum and the Human Rights Campaign:
This report examines the experiences of survey respondents whose gender identities or expressions expand our conventional understanding of gender. It is designed to provide adults with a better understanding of these youth and to help adults find ways to communicate with and support all youth in their lives. The report also provides information and suggestions for those seeking to increase their comfort and competency with the evolving landscape of gender identity and expression.
A Trauma-Informed Approach to Library Services by Rebecca Tolley
We are only now coming to terms with how common trauma really is; a landmark Kaiser study that surveyed patients receiving physicals found that almost two-thirds had experienced at least one form of abuse, neglect, or other trauma as a child. Though originating in the fields of health and social services, trauma-informed care is a framework that holds great promise for application to library work. Empathetic service, positive patron encounters, and a more trusting workplace are only a few of the benefits that this approach offers. In this important book Tolley, experienced in both academic and public libraries, brings these ideas into the library context. Library administrators, directors, and reference and user services staff will all benefit from learning the six key principles of trauma-informed care; characteristics of a trusting and transparent library organization, plus discussion questions to promote a sense of psychological safety among library workers; how certain language and labels can undermine mutuality, with suggested phrases that will help library staff demonstrate neutrality to patron ideas and views during information requests; delivery models that empower patrons; advice on balancing free speech on campus with students' need for safety; how appropriate furniture arrangement can help people suffering from PTSD feel safe; guidance on creating safe zones for LGBTQIA+ children, teens, and adults; and self-assessment tools to support change toward trauma-responsive library services.
ISBN: 9780838919811
Publication Date: 2020
Student Wellness and Academic Libraries by Sara Holder (Editor); Amber Lanno
Post secondary institutions are high stress environments for many students: Undergraduates may be living on their own for the first time, coping with demanding academic requirements, and experimenting with drugs, alcohol, and new social relationships and identities. Advanced degree students tend to have a high level of job insecurity and are also more likely than other students to be juggling family obligations on top of their studies, research, and teaching. Mental health disorders have their peak onset during the university and college years, and severe anxiety is on the rise. Many university libraries across North America are expanding their service offerings to include student wellness initiatives or are making their space available to other campus entities to provide wellness support as mental health issues and awareness of mental health challenges on campus have increased. Student Wellness and Academic Libraries gathers multiple perspectives on wellness programming and discussions of current activities, with case studies, commentary, and research on student wellness initiatives in academic libraries. Some chapters explore one initiative in detail, and others look at a variety of activities and how they fit within a strategy; some focus on a particular aspect of wellness, and others on a particular at-risk group.Academic libraries have always promoted student success through teaching and research support and through instruction in information literacy, a skill that is understood to be useful not just for academic success but also for life success. For college and university students, learning to live well and attend to their mental health are life skills they can and should develop during this time, and academic libraries are increasingly playing a role in this part of the student experience. Student Wellness and Academic Libraries can help those charged with leading these efforts gain valuable insight into ideas and directions the library can take in pursuit of that goal
ISBN: 9780838948644
Publication Date: 2020
Inclusive, equitable, feminist spaces and design
Biophilic Offices: Landscape and the Working Environment
Biophilic design is capable of improving the well-being of those who use a space through reconnection with nature. When this practice is implemented in offices and workshops, this property translates into many benefits. After all, in addition to the emotional qualities that vegetation can bring, it has the ability to filter noise, lighting and allow for a milder climate, with results in team productivity and more optimized services.
How to create a 'self-care space' – 5 expert tips for a tranquil, purposeful home
These design decisions will give you a 'meaningful break from life' – according to designers and psychology experts
How designs influence emotions
Have you ever experienced that being in a room that has spacious high ceilings makes you more relaxed? Or being in a room with some plants makes you more comfortable and motivated?
Salutogenic Architecture
In a creative and explorative discussion, the author analyses detailed and concrete examples and offers ideas on how architecture can advance comprehensibility, manageability and meaningfulness in our lives. Does the physical environment Does the environment enable physical actions? Does it provide clarity? Does it provide for emotional support? Or does the environment block action, frustrate plans and make people feel exasperated? These are the questions to be asked when assessing how ‘salutogenic’ a design is.
Academic Library Building Design: Resources for Planning: Accessibility / Universal Design
ACRL and Core have joined forces to provide a basic framework for architects, planners, and librarians embarking on the planning and design of libraries for higher education.
Resimercial Design: Workplaces that are Designed to Feel Like Home
While you may not be familiar with the term, “resimercial design” is something we see frequently but very rarely take the time to analyze. From the comfy couches in the office lounge to the cozy rugs and ambient lighting in the conference room, resimercial design is all about bringing the comforts of home into the workplace (that’s resi-mercial, get it?).
Nothing about Us Without Us by James I. Charlton
James Charlton has produced a ringing indictment of disability oppression, which, he says, is rooted in degradation, dependency, and powerlessness and is experienced in some form by five hundred million persons throughout the world who have physical, sensory, cognitive, or developmental disabilities. Nothing About Us Without Us is the first book in the literature on disability to provide a theoretical overview of disability oppression that shows its similarities to, and differences from, racism, sexism, and colonialism. Charlton's analysis is illuminated by interviews he conducted over a ten-year period with disability rights activists throughout the Third World, Europe, and the United States. Charlton finds an antidote for dependency and powerlessness in the resistance to disability oppression that is emerging worldwide. His interviews contain striking stories of self-reliance and empowerment evoking the new consciousness of disability rights activists. As a latecomer among the world's liberation movements, the disability rights movement will gain visibility and momentum from Charlton's elucidation of its history and its political philosophy of self-determination, which is captured in the title of his book. Nothing About Us Without Us expresses the conviction of people with disabilities that they know what is best for them. Charlton's combination of personal involvement and theoretical awareness assures greater understanding of the disability rights movement.
ISBN: 9780520925441
Publication Date: 1998
Designing Experiences by J. Robert Rossman; Mathew D. Duerden; B. Joseph Pine (Foreword by)
In an increasingly experience-driven economy, companies that deliver great experiences thrive, and those that do not die. Yet many organizations face difficulties implementing a vision of delivering experiences beyond the provision of goods and services. Because experience design concepts and approaches are spread across multiple, often disconnected disciplines, there is no book that succinctly explains to students and aspiring professionals how to design them. J. Robert Rossman and Mathew D. Duerden present a comprehensive and accessible introduction to experience design. They synthesize the fundamental theories and methods from multiple disciplines and lay out a process for designing experiences from start to finish. Rossman and Duerden challenge us to reflect on what makes a great experience from the user's perspective. They provide a framework of experience types, explaining people's engagement with products and services and what makes experiences personal and fulfilling. The book presents interdisciplinary research underlying key concepts such as memory, intentionality, and dramatic structure in a down-to-earth style, drawing attention to both the macro and micro levels. Designing Experiences features detailed instructions and numerous real-world examples that clarify theoretical principles, making it useful for students and professionals. An invaluable overview of a growing field, the book provides readers with the tools they need to design innovative and indelible experiences and to move their organizations into the experience economy. Designing Experiences features a foreword by B. Joseph Pine II.
ISBN: 9780231191685
Publication Date: 2019
Assessment
Within the context of no-context
What was powerful grew more powerful in ways that could be easily measured, grew less powerful in every way that could not be measured.
Teaching to Transgress by Bell Hooks
These essays, by one of America's leading black intellectuals, face squarely the problems of teachers who do not want to teach, of students who do not want to learn, of racism and sexism in the classroom, and of the gift of freedom that is, for Hooks, the teacher's most important goal.
ISBN: 9780415908078
Publication Date: 1994
Whole person librarianship
a hub for library- social work collaboration
Toward Inclusive Learning Spaces: Physiological, Cognitive, and Cultural Inclusion and the Learning Space Rating System
Inclusive learning space design should be based on a tripartite framework addressing the diverse physiological, cognitive, and cultural needs of learners.
Mapping Sense of Belonging in Library Spaces
mapping student sense of belonging (SB), which
has been correlated to student academic success and associated with improved outcomes for students in
minoritized communities,4 to library spaces, is a way to situate where and how physical spaces support
the success of students in the diverse communities libraries serve. Presenting findings from on an ongoing
dissertation research project employing this approach, this paper provides procedures that academic
libraries may use to assess physical spaces and findings connecting library spaces to student sense of belonging
Feminist evaluation
questions what it means to do research, to question authority, to examine gender issues, to examine the lives of women, and to promote social change
The 10 (ten) principles of Burning Man
not a dictate of how people should be and act, but a reflection of the community’s ethos and culture
From Soft Skills to Hard Data: Measuring Youth Program Outcomes. Second Edition
This guide--a companion to the "Forum's Measuring Youth Program Quality"--can help providers select conceptually grounded, psychometrically sound measures appropriate for programs that serve upper-elementary- through high school-aged youth. The following are appended: (1) Psychometrics: What are They and Why are They Useful?; and (2) Framework & Criteria Used to Evaluate Reliability & Validity Evidence.
The Undercommons by Fred Moten; Stefano Harney
In this series of essays Fred Moten and Stefano Harney draw on the theory and practice of the black radical tradition as it supports, inspires and extends contemporary social and political thought and aesthetic critique. Today the general wealth of social life finds itself confronted by mutations in the mechanisms of control, from the proliferation of capitalist logistics through governance by credit and management of pedagogy. Working from and within the social poesis of life in the undercommons Moten and Harney develop and expand an array of concepts.
ISBN: 9781570272677
Publication Date: 2013
Marketing
Events: accessibility, planning, management
12 tips to make events more accessible and inclusive
When it comes to accessibility for events, the key is to create an environment where everyone can fully participate and engage from the start. In general, persons with disabilities (PWDs) have to go to extra lengths to access information and resort to seeking help from others. Make it easier for them by including accessibility information in the design of your notice or invitation.
Cripple Punk Mag
Here we are going to talk about music, accessibility and how we can make the local scene open to everyone.
The Sacred Art of Lovingkindness by Rami Shapiro; Marcia Ford (Foreword by)
Open your heart and mind and discover--through the sacred art of lovingkindness--the image and likeness of God in yourself and others. "The question at the heart of this book is this: Will you engage this moment with kindness or with cruelty, with love or with fear, with generosity or scarcity, with a joyous heart or an embittered one? This is your choice and no one can make it for you.... Heaven and hell are both inside of you. It is your choice that determines just where you reside." --from the Introduction We are all born in the image of God, but living out the likeness of God is a choice. This inspiring, practical guidebook provides you with the tools you need to realize the divinity within yourself, recognize the divinity within others, and act on the obligation to manifest God's infinite compassion in your own life. Guided by Rabbi Rami Shapiro, you will explore Judaism's Thirteen Attributes of Lovingkindness as the framework for cultivating a life of goodness. Shapiro translates these attributes into practices--drawn from the teachings of a variety of faith traditions--that allow you to actualize God's glory through personal deeds of lovingkindness. You will enrich your own capacity for lovingkindness as you: Harvest kindness through compassionate honesty Make room in your heart for reality Recognize the manifestations of God Embrace the paradoxical truth of not-knowing Be present in the moment Do right by others With candor, wit, and honesty, Shapiro shows you that by choosing to act out of love rather than fear, with kindness rather than anger, you can transform how you perceive the world and ultimately lead a more complete spiritual life.
ISBN: 9781594731518
Publication Date: 2006