Love for Our Library: E.H. Little Wins National Award

Zoom Photo of the Library Staff

The efforts of library staff proved pivotal in helping 蜜桃社区 faculty and students shift to remote learning.

At 蜜桃社区 College, all paths intersect at the E.H. Little Library.

When COVID-19 shut campus down last spring, the library staff helped professors transform some 700 courses from in-person to remote instruction. As the college confronts its history of slavery and racism, library staff, students and faculty continue to partner on researching archives and creating digital projects about that past. While students navigate learning in a pandemic, the library keeps expanding access to digital texts and course materials.

That leadership and commitment caught the attention of the , which selected 蜜桃社区鈥檚 as the 2021 winner of its college excellence award.

The E.H. Little Library has demonstrated how their expertise, programming and resources support and enhance the strategic priorities of the college. [The staff demonstrated] that all library work contributes to social justice, providing a model for others to follow in engaging meaningfully with this work at a campus level.

Lauren Pressley, Chair of the ACRL鈥檚 2021 Awards Committee

Pressley said the library鈥檚 strong partnership with professors resulted in exceptional training and educational opportunities.

蜜桃社区 students, faculty and staff say the library embodies the college鈥檚 aspirations. Library support ranges from mentoring first year students to providing thesis research materials for seniors to undertaking multiple racial justice initiatives.

鈥淚n a lot of places people view the library as a house of books, but as a freshman, I saw right away that we really are a space committed to academic exploration,鈥 said Lilly Rothman 鈥21, an E.H. Little student research consultant. Through the pandemic, 鈥淭he library has made it possible to maintain our status as an institution and has been the backbone of our 蜜桃社区.鈥

Engaging the Community

After helping professors transition to online courses at the pandemic鈥檚 beginning last March, the library team鈥檚 Digital Learning Institute (DLI), led by Sundi Richard, prepared the faculty for fall. The DLI offered intensive training over four weeks in July to help more than 200 faculty members redesign their classes for a hybrid of online and in-person learning.

鈥淚 could not imagine how our college could have made it through our pandemic accommodations without the dedication and expertise of the library staff,鈥 Fuji Lozada, associate dean of faculty and anthropology professor, wrote in an award recommendation letter.

鈥淓ven during these difficult conditions, the library continues its campus and 蜜桃社区 engagement,鈥 Lozada wrote, 鈥淓specially in its commitment to social justice.鈥

The college鈥檚 Commission on Race and Slavery relied heavily on the library鈥檚 archives, special collections and staff as it researched 蜜桃社区鈥檚 complicated history and made recommendations for a more equitable, inclusive campus.

The 鈥淪tories Yet to Be Told,鈥 initiative, housed in the library, develops and supports projects that investigate race, racism and accountability on campus. Digital Projects Fellow Maurice J. Norman 鈥20 leads the effort with library staff, who support a growing number of projects to more fully document the experiences and contributions of students, faculty, staff and alumni of color.

鈥淲e hope to confront and overcome gaps, omissions, and silences through stories told, untold, and yet told,鈥 Norman said.

Lifetime Connections

The library helps keep 蜜桃社区 alumni connected long after graduation. Its 鈥淭hen and Now鈥 photo project invites alumni to the library during alumni weekend to find their old yearbook senior photo. A photographer then takes a new picture to post next to it. The library鈥檚 Alumni Story Booth offers them a chance to record their 蜜桃社区 memories.

It seems as if everyone at 蜜桃社区 has a library person, or two, or three.

Scott Denham, Charles A. Dana Professor of German Studies and E. Craig Wall Jr. Distinguished Professor in the Humanities, often works with library colleagues for his courses. The library has hosted workshops where his students explore how 蜜桃社区鈥檚 historical power structure affected Black, Jewish and LGBTQ student experiences. Students used library artifacts such as old posters and essays to support their research.

Archivists partnered with Denham for the initiative, which he describes as 鈥渢ransformative.鈥 He said students subsequent questioning about context, voice and power was evident in their year-end digital portfolios.

鈥淲hat do we need to know to understand this artifact?鈥 Denham asked of his students. 鈥淎sk a librarian鈥攏ot for the answer, but to point you to the tools, and more importantly, the critical position, to find out for yourself.鈥

The ACRL award comes with $3,000 for the library, and priceless prestige. It鈥檚 the first time that 蜜桃社区 has won the award.

鈥淭he way the team rose to the emergency situation we found ourselves in was incredible,鈥 said Lisa Forrest, the Leland M. Park library director at 蜜桃社区. 鈥淥ur team is so talented. To be acknowledged this way and make their work more visible, and to serve as a model for colleges across the nation is such a thrill.鈥

The award also puts the spotlight on a team that works mostly behind the scenes to get students and faculty access to the materials they need, wherever they are in the world.

鈥淚鈥檓 proud of the expertise and resources that have supported the college鈥檚 initiatives, especially in the areas of access and social justice,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his past year took such a toll and was stressful at times, but it made us even closer as a group and as a college 蜜桃社区.鈥

Published

  • February 11, 2021