9 Feb 12:52
Attending/Presenting at conferences in difficult times
a.j.p.van.den.brekel@... wrote: > International conference on emerging technologies in academic libraries 2010 (emtacl10) > 26-28 April 2010, Trondheim, Norway > > This is a new international conference for academic librarians, information professionals, academic staff, students, library system developers and suppliers, among others. The conference aims to provide answers to the following questions: What can academic libraries do to address change? How can we adapt? Which technologies can/should/must we use/create? (View the conference programme > <http://www.ntnu.no/ub/emtacl/?programme>) This looks like a good conference. "Unfortunately" I'm going to be presenting a workshop at a conference in Montpellier, France on the 28th. Feel my pain. Actually, the real reason for responding (although I changed the subject) was that I was wondering how others managed to go to conferences such as these across the pond (for those of us in North America). I've been on the planning committee for an open source organization (Jasig) conference for the past several years and the registration numbers for our upcoming and previous conference are way down. Most institutions just won't foot the bill to send people to conferences. Over the past couple of years it seems that almost every conference announcement I see eventually has a "registration deadline extended" post so I suspect that conferences in general are getting lower attendance figures. At my library I can essentially attend only one library funded conference a year (my attendance at one in Montpellier is being paid for by an external source). Do ya'll pay your own way to some of the conferences that you attend? The Handheld Librarian conference last year and the one upcoming have set a pretty good precedent for how effective a virtual conference can be. Is that the direction that we will be going? While I made a lot of good contacts through the last hhlib, those face-to-face encounters just can be duplicated virtually.
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