Engaging the Campus Community Through New Roles and New Relationships: The McMaster University Library Postdoctoral Fellowship Program

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer L. Bryan ◽  
Megan E. Gregory ◽  
Charnetta R. Brown ◽  
Annette Walder ◽  
Joshua D. Hamer ◽  
...  

AbstractPostdoctoral fellowships are costly: institutions incur substantial monetary costs, and fellows suffer the opportunity cost of delaying entry into their professional careers. Nevertheless, fellowship training is a beneficial academic investment; the right resources can attract high-quality candidates and maximize return on investment for all parties. This study examined the availability and perceived utility of training resources in a national, multisite interprofessional health services research fellowship program and examined differences in resource perception between alumni and directors as well as M.D. and Ph.D. alumni. One-hundred thirty-one alumni and 15 directors from a multisite interprofessional postdoctoral fellowship completed surveys regarding fellowship resources. Results from the fellowship sample as a whole revealed that mentoring and seminars were the most commonly available resources in fellowships and alumni from the same site often disagreed about resource availability. When we compared alumni and directors’ responses from the same site, we found they often disagreed about resource availability, with directors often being more likely to respond that the resource is available than the alumni. Finally, M.D. alumni reported availability of more resources and found resources to be more useful overall than Ph.D. alumni. Mentoring and seminars are important and commonly provided resources for trainees in fellowship programs; however, M.D.s and Ph.D.s vary in perceived usefulness of other resources, suggesting that one resource does not fit all. Given the gap, postdoctoral fellows may benefit from direct communication of available resources. Moreover, as Ph.D. fellows reported less resource availability and usefulness, attention should be given to meeting their unmet needs. Taken together, this will optimize their fellowship experience, thus better preparing them for their career and, ultimately, their impact on health care.


2019 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 170-2
Author(s):  
Kenneth Blackwell

The author describes two outstanding moments in his work with Russell’s archives, over a period of 52 years, from readying them for sale in London to curating them at McMaster University. The highlights were being hired for the Russell Archives at McMaster and adoption of the correspondence catalogue by the University Library from its maintenance and development as a post-retirement project.


2015 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 77-84
Author(s):  
Maggie Chartier ◽  
Rebecca K. Blais ◽  
Tara Steinberg ◽  
Stephanie Catella ◽  
Erin Dehon ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Nicole Wagner ◽  
Brian Detlor

This paper discusses an information needs study of the McMaster University Library web site in an effort to improve the design and utility of the site from various user perspectives. Study findings and recommendations for future web site development are discussed, many generalizable to academic library web sites at large.Cette communication présente une étude sur les besoins informationnels des utilisateurs sur le site Web de la bibliothèque de l’Université McMaster afin d’améliorer la conception et l’utilité du site Web selon le point de vue de différents utilisateurs. On y discute des résultats de l’étude et des recommandations pour la conception de futurs sites Web, dont plusieurs peuvent être généralisés à l’ensemble des sites Web de bibliothèques universitaires.


Author(s):  
Brian Detlor ◽  
Maureen E. Hupfer ◽  
David Harris Smith

This paper describes a case study investigation of the “Love Your City, Share Your Stories” digital storytelling initiative in Hamilton, Ontario. Data collection involved one-on-one interviews, document review, and participant observations with governance stakeholders from the Hamilton Public Library, McMaster University Library, and the City of Hamilton. Cet article décrit l'étude du cas de l’initiative numérique "Aimez votre ville, partagez vos histoires" à Hamilton, en Ontario. La collecte des données comprenait des entrevues en tête-à-tête, l'examen de documents, et l’observation participante auprès des membres de la direction de la Bibliothèque publique de Hamilton, de la bibliothèque universitaire de l’université McMaster, et de la ville de Hamilton.


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