Fall 2021 Student Art & Creative Media Virtual Exhibition

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You are cordially invited to visit our Virtual Library Art Gallery to explore this semester’s student art and graphic design exhibition!

Directions: Visit the Maui College virtual library, and then enter the Art Gallery.

Beyond the library’s Art Gallery, please feel free to explore the other rooms in this virtual space. If you’d like to share the link to the Maui College Virtual Library, it’s this: https://tinyurl.com/mauicollegevirtuallibrary

Help boost your engagement (or your students’) with the virtual library scavenger hunt!

Past student art exhibitions have been archived on the library’s Art Blog.

ENJOY! 🔮📚

 

 

Rethinking Tenure

The Chronicle of Higher Education’s latest report on tenure couldn’t be more timely for the our University. The report: Rethinking Tenure: Abolish, Strengthen or Replace It? (access for UHMC only) includes the following sections.

Section 1: New Tenure Models for Changing Times
Section 2: Financial, Political, and Equity Concerns
Section 3: The Future of a Beleaguered Institution

The synopsis is as follows:

Tenure as an institution has been shrinking for years. Today, tenured and tenure-track faculty members make up less than 30 percent of the nation’s professoriate. Some colleges are experimenting with alternatives to tenure, finding ways to offer job security and a governance role to those outside the system. Others are trying to make tenure expectations clearer and fairer.

In this collection of Chronicle articles, anchored by newly reported analysis, you’ll hear from academics who want to strengthen tenure, recreate it, abolish it, or experiment with something new in its place. Read on to learn how tenure’s place in the academy is changing.

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Date: August 2021
Pages: 92

 

 

A 💌 Love Letter 💌 from Your Library 📚 💖

Dear UHMC ‘Ohana~
Aloha and welcome to Fall 2021! Your library is here for you and your students. 💌
During Fall 2021, we continue to be available online and in-person.
❤️ Online
Contact us to connect with a librarian or staff member via live chat, text, phone or email. We are available to assist you remotely with scheduling study rooms and appointments, equipment loans, book paging services, and individual research consultations.
❤️ In-Person
Library Hours ~ M-Th: 10am to 4pm. Closed F, Sat, Sun.
When the library is closed, other spaces for students may be available (check with Kākoʻo Support Services for updates).
In-Person Services are available to current UH cardholders who have successfully completed all current campus entrance protocols.
Library in-person services include:
  • Computer Lab with design stations and tech support
  • A variety of comfortable seating options
  • Study rooms for individual or partner study
  • Thousands of books to browse
  • Print (color and b/w) + Scan  + Fax
  • Scavenger hunts and other opportunities for discovery
  • Makerspace with 3D printing and Podcast Studio
Have a great semester! 💌
 
 
Sincerely,
 
Your Library 💖 🦄

Read Haunani-Kay Trask

Haunani-Kay Trask was an educator and political activist who spoke and wrote about the theft of Hawai‘i and the abuse of Native Hawaiian rights.
Her poetry is quite powerful and often deals with themes of being colonized.
Through HathiTrust, we have temporary (COVID “emergency”) online access to two of her books of poetry:
From the HathiTrust book page, click on Check Out:
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You’ll get renewable hours with the books. Return it early, when you’re done, so others can read the title:

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(Once we are out of HathiTrust’s COVID emergency access status in August, all of her books will be available to you in print from the UHMC library.)

For those interested in Haunani-Kay Trask’s nonfiction, the highly-regarded From a Native Daughter: From Colonialism and Sovereignty in Hawaii is available to read online, through EBSCO ebooksKūʻē: Thirty Years of Land Struggle in Hawaiʻi (a powerful visual representation of the fight for Indigenous rights in Hawai‘i) is available in print from the library (get the call number and book status here).

And, if you do a search for Haunani-Kay Trask in our catalog (Primo), you’ll find articles she wrote and literary reviews of her work.

2nd Annual Campus-wide ANTIRACISM READING DAY

On June 30th, please join the library in taking a pause…

 

As we consider and celebrate Progressive Pride Month month and Juneteenth, the UHMC library continues to support the last day in June (June 30th) as an annual, campus-wide Antiracism Reading Day — reading for antiracism reflection, education, and action.

 

This “event” originally began as the library’s response to the May 25th, 2020 murder of George Floyd that catalyzed world-wide protests, reflection, and expressions for change. Many of our institutional leaders and colleagues at UH published solidarity statements that called for continued change to the systems of racism (read more about this in our library blog post from 6/20/20).

 

Since his killing one year ago, George Floyd has become a symbol for racial reckoning in the U.S. At Maui College, we’ve been creating spaces to discuss issues of race, power, and equity in the context of Hawaiʻi and higher education.

 

The Reading Day Recommendations from last Summer (scroll down this post to read the recommendations) continue on as viable resources. The focus of the list is institutional and systemic racism, and highlights might be our collection of “classics” (such as the ebook, Why are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?) and Librarian Shavonn’s Books on Anti-Racism in Hawaiʻi with focus on Kānaka. Or, visit the library to explore Progressive Pride Month display (💗 this on our Facebook and IG pages).

 

We hope you find something of interest to read from the library (or anywhere!)for tomorrow’s 2nd Annual Campus-wide Antiracism Reading Day!

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(what is the meaning of the new progressive pride flag!?)

UH Summer Book Club to Focus on “New” Civics Education

This Summer’s reading: Building Better Citizens: A New Civics Education for All by Holly Korbey

This Spring, the Hawaii Judiciary formed a Commission to Promote and Advance Civic Education (“PACE Commission”) and events surrounding the last national election have highlighted the need for a renewed conversation around civic education. In keeping with both the national and state focus on civic education, the book selected for this summer is Building Better Citizens: A New Civics Education for All by Holly Korbey (2019).

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While the book focuses on civics education for K-12 in some detail, the lessons and overall discussion of the importance of civic education for an informed citizenry is relevant for higher education as well. The UHMC library has purchased electronic copies of the text through Ebook Central and one copy in print (currently in cataloging).  You can also (of course) purchase the book for around $30 via any bookseller.

Publisher’s description:

 

Student Art & Design Virtual Exhibition

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You are cordially invited to visit the Library’s virtual Art Gallery to explore this semester’s student art!

 

Spring art and design students have selected their favorite work to share with you!

Beyond the library’s Art Gallery, please feel free to explore the other rooms in this virtual space. If you’d like to share the link to the Maui College Virtual Library, it’s this: https://tinyurl.com/mauicollegevirtuallibrary

The library’s virtual doors are open to the world 24/7!

ENJOY!

⚡Power Up for Finals!⚡@ Your Library

Support for students, by students!

Power Up booths for refreshments, supplies, de-stress activities, study advice, and encouragement!

Extended study hours at the Library!

Thanks to the Library Tech Tutors, Student Government, and various Student Club Officers for working, hosting and sponsoring this event!

May 3rd – 13th, 9am to 5pm
Library Building Main Entrance

power up at your library