| Formation permanente |
Veuillez cliquer sur les titres des cours pour lire les résumés et les biographies des animateurs et animatrices
| Le lundi 28 mai 2007 | Le
mardi 29 mai 2007 |
|---|---|
|
LE 1 - Introduction to Peer Review Animatrices
: Jessie McGowan, Margaret Sampson |
LE 4 - Advanced Web Searching - COMPLET Animateur
: Greg Notess
|
| LE 2 - Introduction to pharmaceutical sources and resources Animatrice :
Kaitryn Campbell
|
LE 5 - Patient Safety Resource Seminar: Librarians on the Front Lines Animatrice :
Holly Ann Burt
|
| UO1 – PubMed for Experts - Complét Animatrice :
Holy Ann Burt
|
Animateur :
Jay Daly
|
| UO2
-Using Social Software in Health Animateurs :
Dean Giustini, Eugene Barsky
|
LE
7 - Developing Online Tutorials Animateur :
Greg Notess
|
| LE3- Strategic Planning and Change Management Animatrice :
Bonnie Robinson
|
Animatrice :
Margaret Ann Wilkinson
|
UO 2 - Using Social Software in Health
libraries Complét
Dean Giustini et Eugene Barsky
Le lundi 28 mai 2007
13h30 - 17h
Laboratoire informatique de la Bibliothèque Morisset, Université
d'Ottawa
Description :
This session will cover the basics of using social software in health libraries. A number of Web 2.0 trends and tools will be discussed such as RSS feeds, blogs, podcasts, social networking, social bookmarking, customized search engines and wikis. The pros/cons and application of social software tools within the context of health librarianship will be outlined in a session that will cover discussion of trends, research, case study and hands-on exercises. A course wiki will include handouts and links to relevant research and backround reading.
Biographies des animateurs :
Eugene Barsky is the Physiotherapy Outreach Librarian at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, University of British Columbia (UBC), where he provides information services to British Columbia practicing physiotherapists and implements many Web 2.0 applications into his outreach work with allied health professionals. Eugene holds a MLIS degree from UBC, and previously worked in medical clinical research and pharmaceutical industry regulatory and business intelligence.
Dean Giustini is on study leave from the UBC Biomedical branch library. His research is about the use of adult learning theories in the context of evidence-based practice and teaching information literacy. Dean is an adjunct instructor at UBC's School of Library, Archival and Information Studies and uses blogs and wikis in his work.
LE 4 - Advanced Web Searching
- Complét
Greg Notess
Le mardi 29 mai 2007
8h30 - 12h
Salle Macdonald, Hôtel Lord Elgin
Description :
Explore the latest and greatest search capabilities of the primary Web search engines. As the Web grows, search engines mature, their databases change, and effective Internet searching becomes increasingly complex. To enable efficient information retrieval on the Web, this workshop covers Web search strategies and compares major Web search engines in terms of their databases and specifics on advanced search techniques. It includes what you need to know about Boolean, adjacency, field searching, limits, and other special features. The primary focus is on the largest Web search engines: Google, Yahoo!, Live Search, and Ask , with lesser coverage of Gigablast, Exalead, and any new and upcoming search engines. In addition, the workshop looks at the constraints of the search engines: inconsistent results, lack of overlap, and the significant hidden Web that they fail to uncover.
Biographies des animateurs :
Greg R. Notess has been writing, speaking, and consulting about Internet information resources and search engines since 1991. A three-time Information Authorship award winner, he is the "On the Net" and "Internet Search Engine Update" columnist for ONLINE. Greg is the author of the several Internet books including his latest, Teaching Web Search Skills: Techniques and Strategies of Top Trainers and the first three editions of Government Information on the Internet.
An internationally-known conference speaker on search engines and other Internet topics, Greg has spoken at conferences such as Internet Librarian, Online Information, Web Search University, the Special Libraries Association Annual Conference, and international meetings in London, Oslo, Stockholm, Paris, Pretoria, Montreal, Copenhagen, Sydney, Zagreb, and several locations in India. On the Web, Greg maintains Search Engine Showdown http://searchengineshowdown.com/ which reviews, compares, analyzes, and tries to keep current up with the rapidly changing Web search tools.
Greg has consulted for several major (and minor) search engines and
is also a professor and reference librarian at Montana State University-Bozeman.
LE 7 - Developing Online Tutorials
Greg Notess
Le mardi 29 mai 2007
13h30 - 17h
Salle Macdonald, Hôtel Lord Elgin
Description :
Online tutorials used to be extremely time-intensive to create. With the increase in reference and instruction to distant users in all types of libraries, and the need for just-in-time learning in many organizations, we need quicker ways to create tutorials and demonstrations to teach our online library resources. New tools make it quick and easy to create movies for online demonstrations and tutorials with a minimum of effort. Explore using software such as Camtasia, Captivate, Wink, and others to record screen actions and quickly create online tutorials. Learn a process for expediting the creation of these tutorials.
Biographies des animateurs :
Greg R. Notess has been writing, speaking, and consulting about Internet information resources and search engines since 1991. A three-time Information Authorship award winner, he is the "On the Net" and "Internet Search Engine Update" columnist for ONLINE. Greg is the author of the several Internet books including his latest, Teaching Web Search Skills: Techniques and Strategies of Top Trainers and the first three editions of Government Information on the Internet.
An internationally-known conference speaker on search engines and other Internet topics, Greg has spoken at conferences such as Internet Librarian, Online Information, Web Search University, the Special Libraries Association Annual Conference, and international meetings in London, Oslo, Stockholm, Paris, Pretoria, Montreal, Copenhagen, Sydney, Zagreb, and several locations in India. On the Web, Greg maintains Search Engine Showdown http://searchengineshowdown.com/ which reviews, compares, analyzes, and tries to keep current up with the rapidly changing Web search tools.
Greg has consulted for several major (and minor) search engines and is also a professor and reference librarian at Montana State University-Bozeman.
LE 3 - Strategic Planning and Change
Management
Bonnie Robinson
Le lundi 28 mai 2007
13h30 - 17h
Salle St. Laurent, Hôtel Lord Elgin
Description :
Managers have a challenging role, particularly when implementing new strategic directions and managing change. Understanding the principles of strategic planning and change management is a necessary foundation for every manager. The people aspects of change management require an understanding of human behaviour. This course will cover the essentials of strategic planning and change management and provide practical approaches that can be used in the workplace to help employees cope with the uncertainty arising from change and adapting to the new realities.
Biographies des animateurs :
Bonnie E. Robinson is the founder of Pivotal Leadership Services, a consulting firm which helps organizations build their leadership capacity. Bonnie has extensive executive level experience leading an international information management services company business as a Vice-President and General Manager. She also has experience as a Vice-President of Human Resources in both the private and public sectors.
Her combined senior management business, human resources, process management and information management experience gives her the executive insights, tools and practical approaches to help organizations develop and implement the strategies needed to ensure its development of high performance leaders.
Bonnie is passionate about the importance of developing effective leaders.
She advises executives regarding their organization's leadership development
strategies and is a leadership coach.
LE 1 - Introduction to Peer Review
Jessie McGowan et Margaret Sampson
Le lundi 28 mai 2007
8h30 - 12h
Salle St. Laurent, Hôtel Lord Elgin tel
Description :
This course will provide an introduction to peer review for the health librarian, with a focus on assisting collegues in refining their work. Peer reviewing for professional and scientific journals will be discussed, however the focus will be on the practical function of reviewing electronic search strategies. Building on a recent systematic review and survey undertaken by the course instructors, participants will learn a structured reviewing technuque that focuses on 7 evidence-based problem areas. Emphasis will be on achieving the right balance in the review. Ideally, peer reviewers will suggest useful improvements and help catch technical errors, while respecting differences in searching style, completing the review without spending an undue amount of time, and creating a positive experience for the reviewer and peer whose work in under consideration. This course will be of interest to searchers who would like to improve their skills and meet collegues to partner with in mutual peer review, managers who would like to implement peer review as a quality assurance technique, and anyone interested in reviewing manuscripts for journals.
Biographies des animateurs :
Jessie McGowan, (MLIS, AHIP) is a research librarian at the Institute of Population Health /Ottawa Health Research Institute. She is also an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Ottawa and an Associate Editor with the Journal of Clinical Epidemiology. She works with the Cochrane Collaboration's EPOC Group as a Trials Search Coordinator and is involved with the Cochrane Musculoskeletal Group. She has undertaken the searching for many systematic reviews including Cochrane Reviews and EPC projects. She is a lead author for a Cochrane review dealing with access to information resources for health care professionals. She has also developed databases of studies for the Cochrane Equity field and the Cochrane EPOC review group. Her research interests include developing sensitive and specific searches for review, developing search protocols and producing knowledge translation products for clinicians and policy makers.
Margaret Sampson (MLIS) is head of the Chalmers Research Group (UO-EPC) information science group. Her research interests include studying the contribution of databases to the evidence base of systematic reviews and developing electronic tools for systematic reviewers. Her research work has included projects examining the provision of evidence through a physician order entry system; statistical techniques for determining when systematic reviews are in need of updating; and developing consensus standards for search strategy reporting and a peer review network for search strategy evaluation. She has made a number of theoretical contributions to the study of database bias and the validation of search strategies. She is an expert searcher with an in-depth knowledge of information retrieval from the major biomedical databases. She has undertaken the searching for numerous systematic reviews including nine EPC projects.
LE 2 - Introduction to pharmaceutical sources and resources
Kaitryn Campbell
Le lundi 28 mai 2007
8h30 - 12h
Salle Laurier, Hôtel Lord Elgin
Description :
Due to the complexity of the terminology and issues involving pharmacotherapy, and the rapid developments within the field, locating pharmaceutical information can be challenging. This course offers an introduction to pharmaceutical development and regulation in a North American context, along with an overview of key biomedical databases, web- and print-based resource searching. Intended audience: those who search for and provide information to clinicians, researchers and/or consumers in a healthcare or health sciences setting.
Biographies des animateurs :
Kaitryn Campbell is a Research Librarian for the Program for Assessment of Technology in Health (PATH) at McMaster University/St. Joseph's Healthcare in Hamilton, Ontario. Prior to PATH, Kaitryn was employed as a Medical Librarian at the Ottawa Hospital and an Information Specialist at the Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH). She has contributed to many health technology assessments and systematic reviews involving pharmaceuticals, devices and systems in her more than 5 years of healthcare research. With an MLIS from the University of Western Ontario and undergraduate degrees in linguistics and education, Kaitryn's current research interests are database search methods and information retrieval in health economics.
Course Co-Developer :
James Bowen is a Research Associate with the Program for Assessment
of Technology in Health (PATH) at McMaster University/St. Joseph's Healthcare
in Hamilton, Ontario. Prior to joining PATH, James worked for both Eli
Lilly Canada and Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto specializing in medical/drug
information, medical education, health economics, clinical drug trial
management and pharmacy database management. He received both his undergraduate
and graduate training at the Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto
and currently practices pharmacy in a community setting. His current
research involves health technology assessment and new medical technologies
being introduced into the Ontario healthcare system.
UO 1 - PubMed for Experts
- Complét
Holly Ann Burt
Le lundi 28 mai 2007
8h30 - 12h
Laboratoire informatique de la Bibliothèque Morisset, Université
d'Ottawa
Description :
Designed as an advanced class for experienced MEDLINE searchers, this hands-on class will highlight advanced PubMed techniques that can be used to conduct comprehensive searches. The class builds upon the user's own knowledge of searching to use PubMed more effectively. Attendees are encouraged to contribute past and present difficult searches to discuss with the class.
Biographies des animateurs :
Holly Ann Burt, MLIS, is the Outreach and Exhibits Coordinator and
Ohio State Contact Librarian for the National Network of Libraries,
Greater Midwest Region (NN/LM-GMR). Holly teaches and creates materials
for a variety of NN/LM and MLA classes including PubMed and TOXNET,
exhibits National Library of Medicine products and services at national
conferences, manages several sections of the GMR website, and most
recently developed a patient safety class for MLA CE credit. Prior to
joining the GMR in 2005, Holly worked as Information Resources Manager
for
the National Patient Safety Foundation.
LE 5 - Patient Safety Resource Seminar: Librarians on the Front Lines
Holly Ann Burt
Le mardi 29 mai 2007
8h30 - 12h
Salle Laurier, Hôtel Lord Elgin
Description :
This interactive seminar focuses on ways health librarians can become more involved in the patient safety processes and activities within their institutions and organizations. Topics include understanding the issues of patient safety; locating where patient safety practices exist within the institution; and identifying patient safety resources for health professionals, for administration and staff, and for patients and families. Lecture, discussion and brainstorming help librarians become effective agents for addressing patient safety issues.
Biographies des animateurs :
Holly Ann Burt, MLIS, is the Outreach and Exhibits Coordinator and
Ohio State Contact Librarian for the National Network of Libraries,
Greater Midwest Region (NN/LM-GMR). Holly teaches and creates materials
for a variety of NN/LM and MLA classes including PubMed and TOXNET,
exhibits National Library of Medicine products and services at national
conferences, manages several sections of the GMR website, and most
recently developed a patient safety class for MLA CE credit. Prior to
joining the GMR in 2005, Holly worked as Information Resources Manager
for
the National Patient Safety Foundation
LE 6 - QuickDoc Workshop
Jay Daly
Le mardi 29 mai 2007
8h30 - 12h
Salle St. Laurent, Hôtel Lord Elgin
Description :: Introduction to the QuickDOC software program and its interaction with NLM's DOCLINE system. Participants will learn how to perform a web-based installation, how to configure the program to achieve local record-keeping goals, how the program interacts with DOCLINE to automatically save data, and how to generate local and inter-library reports, invoices, lookups, and EFTS uploads.
Biographies des animateurs :
Jay Daly is the developer of the QuickDOC program, which has been
used by libraries in the United States and Canada since 1987. He also
continues to work on special projects at the Agoos Library, Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, where he was co-director from 1984-1994.
Won the Frank Bradway Rogers Information Advancement Award, Medical
Library Association, 1993.
Crown copyright licensing chart
Margaret Ann Wilkinson
Le mardi 29 mai 2007
13h30 - 17h30
Salle St. Laurent, Hôtel Lord Elgin
Description :
Come and work through the copyright concerns and questions facing health libraries today. This workshop will respond to your concerns about the copyright ownership of materials found in your collection, in your institution, and online. We will discuss the rights of the individuals and organizations that hold copyright over materials in which you are interested. We will discuss the rights that have been clearly recognized for librarians and library users by the Supreme Court of Canada in the case involving the Great Library of the Law Society of Upper Canada and the legal publishers in Canada. We will discuss potential relationships with collectives such as AccessCopyright and we will look at the relationship between copyright and other areas of concern such as personal data protection (or privacy) legislation.
Biographies des animateurs :
Dr. Margaret Ann Wilkinson is a Professor at the University of Western Ontario jointly appointed to the Faculty of Law and the Faculty of Information and Media Studies. Called to the Ontario Bar in 1980, Professor Wilkinson first practiced as a lawyer before returning to do graduate work in library and information science. Her doctoral dissertation on access and privacy legislation won the American Society for Information Science (now ARIST) award in 1992. She is Director of the Area of Concentration in Intellectual Property, Information and Technology Law at the Faculty of Law. She is appointed to the Faculty of Graduate Studies for law, library and information science, journalism, and media studies. Professor Wilkinson has published widely on copyright and other information subjects and teaches courses in Intellectual Property law, Advanced Intellectual Property law, International Protection of Intellectual Property, Legal Issues for Information Professionals and the Ownership and Governance of Information. She has given many previous professional workshops in copyright to librarians and academics.
![]() |
Association des bibliothèques de la santé du Canada
|