---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Thu, 13 Apr 1995 08:20:40 CST From: David T Terry <gldt@UTXDP.DP.UTEXAS.EDU> Subject: AD: Five LIS Seminars in Austin, Texas Graduate School of Library and Information Science (GSLIS) SZB 564, MC D7000 The University of Texas at Austin Austin, TX 78712-1276 CONTINUING EDUCATION SEMINARS (5) Updated April 3, 1995 1) Austin, Texas, Friday, April 28, 1995 -- one-day seminar, "Internet Servers: Building a Gas Station on the Information Superhighway; or, Putting Your Collection on the Internet," will be held at the Joe C. Thompson Conference Center at UT-Austin. Fee is $65 ($60 group rate**). Speaker is Kevin Marsh, executive director of Information Access Institute. This seminar will address the justification, creation, organization, and administration of an Internet Server. Specific topics will include: Why serve on the Internet; How to connect to the Internet; What hardware and software is required; What kinds of information can be provided; Which protocols are best for different kinds of access; How to configure the system for subject-based searching; and Where to obtain software and additional information. Information professionals in libraries, archives, or museums interested in providing public Internet access to their collections are encouraged to attend. 2) Wednesday, June 28, 1995 -- one-day seminar, "Advanced Online Cataloging with the Integrated MARC Format, Internet...," will be held at the Thompson Conference Center at UT-Austin. Fee is $50. Speaker is Dr. Joanna Fountain, head of technical services at Austin Independent School District and instructor at The University of Texas at Austin, GSLIS. 1995 ushered in the long-awaited integration of machine-readable cataloging formats, paving the way to more sophisticated description of library materials for improved computer access. In this course, you will review the new USMARC tags and content designators in relation to current Anglo-American rules, and practice cataloging the formats most often requiring local record creation. This course will also seek to enhance searchers' access using "with" notes, added title entries, linking entries, and genre terms. The Internet has given us new connections and opportunities to share bibliographic and content data in ways we have only begun to explore. Come prepared to share your own experiences in using this new tool, and see demonstrations of some you may not have tried yet, including the Library of Congress Information System (LOCIS). If you have a copy of the LOCIS guide, you may wish to bring it. Excerpts will be included in the handout material. 3) Thursday, June 29, 1995 -- updated one-day seminar, "Global Library Update: Reference and the Internet," will be held at the Thompson Conference Center at UT-Austin. Fee is $50. The speaker is Mary Lynn Rice-Lively, doctoral fellow and instructor at The University of Texas at Austin, Graduate School of Library and Information Science. The workshop will be an update on providing reference services on and from the Internet. This will include powerful new Internet search tools, web browsers (including Netscape and Mosaic), and information on alternatives for Internet access (including SLIP and ISDN). Knowledge of the use of basic Internet tools is recommended. The workshop will be particularly useful to those with an interest in integrating use of the Internet into reference and information services. 4) Friday, June 30, 1995 -- one-day seminar, "Teaching the Internet: What to Teach and How to Plan," will be held at the Thompson Conference Center at UT-Austin. Fee is $50. Speaker is Mary Lynn Rice-Lively, doctoral fellow and instructor at UT-Austin GSLIS. Workshop participants will consider key steps to planning, designing, and implementing an Internet training program. The day's activities will explore teaching strategies, introduce basic adult learning theory, and explore whether or not there should be basic trainer competencies. Participating future Internet trainers will consider how to decide where to begin, how to target a specific audience, and how to target a general audience. Additionally, participants will explore through demonstration the vase amount of Internet resources available on the Internet, including handouts, presentation slides, graphs, and more. Although there will be no group hands-on facility, the workshop will involve a high level of participation, and will offer a combination of lecture, demonstration (good and bad training tactics), as well as a guide to training resources on the Internet. 5) Friday, July 21, 1995 -- one-day seminar, "Caught in the Internet: Fishing for Electronic Information," will be held at the University of Texas at Austin, Joe C. Thompson Conference Center. Fee is $33. Speaker is Christine Peterson, automation consultant at the Texas State Library. Co-sponsored by Library Development Division, Texas State Library. Do you feel lost when the discussion turns toward the Internet? Would you like to get a handle on the Internet and what it can provide for you and your library? If you are interested in learning about the Internet, then this workshop is for you! Anyone with basic computer experience is welcome. This workshop may be particularly helpful to those who currently have Internet access, will have Internet access within the next year, or those who are thinking about connecting to the Internet. This full day workshop is designed to provide librarians with a solid basis for beginning exploration of the Internet. The workshop objectives are: to define the Internet and explain how it works; to explain terms or "jargon" associated with the Internet; to demonstrate the basics of Internet use; and to view the Internet as a library resource. **Group rate applies for 3 or more participants from the same organization or association who register as a group. For more information, or to register, call David Terry at (512)471-8806; email: gldt@utxdp.dp.utexas.edu; fax (512)471-3971.