Director Search Notes
What makes a good director?
- understand web page development
- expertise with digital assets management
- ability to work with scholars and students to make the right information accessible
- ability to work well with information technologists (e.g., campus computing)
- ability to mentor others (help them keep up with latest trends)
The Library Provides
- Access
- Reliability (reuse of materials)
- Provenance
- Authority ?
All of which are essential for scholarship. Is this still true? (no, the network obliterates these)
Consumer or Author
In particular, without effective informatics teaching, a serious risk exists that Europe becomes a mere consumer of technologies designed elsewhere, running on devices also manufactured elsewhere.
Computational Thinking - problem-solving techniques include:
- Representing information through abstractions such as models and simulations.
- Logically structuring and analyzing data.
- Automating solutions through algorithmic thinking, involving carefully described sequences of steps taken from a well-defined catalog of basic operations.
- Identifying, analyzing and implementing possible solutions with the goal of achieving the most efficient and combination of steps and resources, including both human and hardware resources.
- Formulating problems in a way that facilitates the use a computer and computerized tools to help solve them.
- Generalizing the problem-solving process to a wide variety of problems.
Our Business
I like to think it is learning and promoting academic success.
Roles
- Advanced understanding of digital technologies and trends and the impact on information management infrastructure, and the Library's ability to provide collections and services.
- Actively build and develop a diverse, skilled, and engaged workforce,
Qualifications
- A Master's degree in library and information science computer science, or a closely related field.
- Minimum of five years' experience working in academic research libraries.
- Demonstrated knowledge of current trends and issues in the application of technology to libraries and higher education.
- Substantive knowledge of digital assets and the technical infrastructure required for their life-cycle management, including metadata requirements, migration strategies, best practices in digital preservation, and relevant national and international standards.
- Substantive knowledge of library systems, digital libraries, and digital repositories.
- Familiarity with modern software development methodologies and technologies.