Marginalia Fall 2023

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Dear Friends,

Many of you fondly remember days spent in quiet study in libraries filled with books, exemplifying the scholarly mastery to which students aspire when they arrive on a university campus. The Merrill-Cazier Library still maintains over 1 million physical and almost as many electronic items. Often our Friends support us by making financial contributions toward the development of our collections. However, a library is about more than books.

For example, increasingly, libraries must address new expectations from our campus colleagues, specifically by supporting student success initiatives within our space. Inviting students into our building and delivering the message that everyone belongs is an essential component to the new librarianship. Perhaps nothing exemplifies our work in this arena most recently as well as our After Hours event, a new campus tradition. This September we welcomed the entire first-year class into the library before the first day of school for a shush-free party complete with a dirty soda bar. Thank you so much to our Friends for sponsoring the pizza table for this event.

Our work developing and promoting open educational resources (OER) is another significant contribution we make toward student success. Since 2014, more than 57,000 USU students have saved a combined $2.4 million through using open (free!) course materials, instead of purchasing expensive textbooks. Again, thank you to our Friends organization for sponsoring faculty grants to spur the development of these rich pedagogical resources.

Find out more about these initiatives in this issue of Marginalia and please continue to support the work we are doing to enrich the USU student experience.

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(Right) Library faculty and staff welcomed new and returning students at USU's Day on the Quad.
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Scan the QR code below or visit: library.usu.edu/news/guides/mentalhealth to explore the Libraries' mental health resources for students.

Student Highlight: Valerie Nelson

Valerie Nelson has been employed at the USU Libraries as a Library Peer Mentor in the Learning & Engagement Services unit since April 2022. As an Undergraduate Teaching Fellow, Valerie does invaluable work that ranges from teaching English 1010 library orientation sessions, to giving tours, to staffing the research help desk and chat, to maintaining online learning materials. She also helps with high-impact outreach efforts, such as the Library After Hours event, therapy dog visits, Finals’ Week de-stress events, and more. In collaboration with two faculty librarians, Valerie recently helped analyze survey data for a research project examining the information literacy skills of over 800 incoming USU students.

One of the interest areas Valerie has developed in her time with the Libraries is digital outreach and engagement. Last year, Valerie led a library-wide group of student employees to produce content for USU Libraries’ TikTok channel, resulting in over 6,000 views. Currently, Valerie serves as a member of the Libraries’ Newsroom Committee and works to create content that highlights collections and research tools of interest to other students. One of her current projects is a post showcasing library e-books and videos about mental health and wellbeing, timed to support students during midterms, destigmatize mental health challenges, and encourage peers to seek support.

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Faculty Highlight: Liz Woolcott

Associate Dean Liz Woolcott recently wrapped up a 4-year, $250,000 Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) grant to develop D-CRAFT, a digital repository assessment toolkit. She worked alongside peers from six prominent universities in the U.S. and Canada under the auspices of the Digital Library Federation Content Reuse Working Group.

Scan here or visit reuse.diglib.org to explore D-CRAFT

The D-CRAFT toolkit aims to provide digital repositories practitioners with training on methods and tools to develop assessment programs to analyze the use of the unique content within their repositories. In addition to providing tutorials for each of the assessment metrics, it also provides ethical guidelines for developing an assessment program, examples of policies that practitioners can reuse, and frameworks for telling stories of impact.

Additionally, the grant team developed a theoretical framework to conceptualize the use and reuse of digital objects and articulated the framework in a peer-reviewed, open-access article which recently won a 2023 Literati Award.

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After Hours Welcomes New Students

In late August, the Library threw its second After Hours event, a party designed to familiarize first-year Connections students with the Library. Approximately 1,375 students came to play games, eat food, take part in a raffle, and learn about the Library. Post-event surveys showed that 86% of students who attended feel more comfortable exploring and navigating the Merrill-Cazier Library building and 75% would use a new library service or resource.

The Friends of the Merrill-Cazier Library graciously donated $2,000 to After Hours, providing 200 pizzas for hungry attendees and volunteers. Several board members of the Friends also volunteered their time to staff the event. The Library is incredibly grateful to the Friends for their support.

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New Friends Acquisitions

This semester, the Friends agreed to purchase two important pieces of history to add to our collection. Both items can be used by a number of classes and will serve as educational materials for many years to come.

The first item is a copy of the 1863 “Treaty Between the United States of America and the Shoshonee-Goship Bands of Indians.” The treaty called for “peace and friendship between Shoshonee-Goship bands of Indians and the citizens and Government of the United States.”

The second purchase is a 2nd edition copy of “Two ordinances of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament: For the speedie demolishing of all organs, images, and all manner of superstitious monuments in all cathedrall, parish-churches and chappels throwout the Kingdome of England and Dominion of Wales.”

This rare copy dates back to 1644 and is bound with 19th century red quarter Morocco and marbled boards.

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Old Ephraim: 100 Years of Legend

The Libraries curated a special exhibit this semester honoring local folklore legend Old Ephraim. According to local sheep herder Frank Clark’s handwritten account, which is housed in USU’s Special Collections & Archives, the grizzly bear was known for terrorizing livestock in northern Utah during the early twentieth century. A hundred years ago, his reign came to an end when Clark hunted the grizzly down, shooting the bear an estimated ten times.

Along with Old Ephraim’s skull, which is on permanent display on the Merrill-Cazier Library's lower level, other bear artifacts, including a full-size mounted Kodiak bear taxidermy, were borrowed from the Mason Wildlife Exhibit at the Quinney Natural Resources Library. The exhibit attracted a lot of local foot traffic, including after school clubs and Boy Scout groups.

Read more about Old Ephraim in the Libraries' digital exhibit at: library.usu.edu/exhibits

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Friends-Funded OER Grants

Save Students Thousands

Teaching, learning, and research resources that are free of cost and access barriers are known as Open Educational Resources (OER). This year, the Friends of Merrill-Cazier Library graciously donated $4,000 to OER, which helped fund four OER grant projects.

One of these textbook projects, titled Foundations of Aural Skills by Timothy Chenette, will be used by every USU undergraduate music major free of cost. Foundations of Aural Skills has been selected to be the inaugural winner of the Society for Music Theory’s Pedagogy Award. Because this book contains innovative H5P interactive activities and embedded Spotify playlists, it’s also receiving nationwide interest and will likely be incorporated into other institutions' curriculum.

The other two textbook projects funded by this generous Friends donation include Arthur J. Caplan's A Practicum in Behavioral Economics from USU's Department of Applied Economics, and Amanda Dawson's Theatre History and Literature I: Play Anthology from the Department of Theatre Arts.

The fourth project consisted of an adoption grant by Jennifer Burbank from the Department of Biology, who replaced commercial textbooks with existing OER textbooks and other freely available supplemental materials in her courses.

These four projects will save USU students an estimated $14,700 each year going forward.

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2023 Arrington Mormon History Lecture

Utah State University Alum and award-winning historian Jared Farmer delivered the 2023 Leonard J. Arrington Mormon History Lecture, "Music & the Unspoken Truth," on October 5th at the Russell/Wanlass Performance Hall on USU's Logan campus.

Farmer discussed the religious relationship between music, vocality, and silence. The 90-minute lecture blended presentation and performance, creating a

unique soundscape of radio snippets, sermons, choir performances, and more. An empty chair took center stage to represent the artists whose work played through the performance hall's sound system.

A transcript of this lecture will be available summer 2024 at: digitalcommons.usu.edu/ arrington_lecture

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USU Alum Jared Farmer presents the 2023 Arrington Mormon History Lecture.
Nonprofit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Logan, UT Permit 1 Friends of Merrill-Cazier Library 3000 Old Main Hill Logan, UT 84322-3000 BECOME A FRIEND of the library Two ways to give: Visit library.usu.edu/support/friends Send a check for a minimum of $25 to: Friends of Merrill-Cazier Library 3000 Old Main Hill Logan, UT 84322-3000 OR Marginalia © 2023 Published by: Friends of Merrill-Cazier Library Issue Coordinator: Trina Shelton Graphic Designer: Shay Larsen Photographers: Kellianne Gammill Contributors: Kellianne Gammill, Liz Woolcott, Stephanie Western, Erin Davis TWITTER INSTAGRAM FACEBOOK Curious about library events and services? Follow us @USULibraries
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