MEDIA RELEASES
ContactJessica Mackinnon
jmack@dom.edu
(708) 524-6289
Dominican University Presents Follett Lecture
Dominican University’s Graduate School of Library and Information Science will present the second annual C.W. Follett Lecture on Wednesday, February 15 at 6:00 p.m. in the Lund Auditorium, 7900 W. Division Street, River Forest. A reception will follow the lecture.
Edward J. Valuaskas, Follett Chair and assistant professor in the Graduate School of Library and Information Science (GSLIS), will address the topic “Googlization of Libraries: Debunking the Internet Godzilla Myth.” He will examine the impact of digital information on libraries and how the popularity of Google can serve as a catalyst, rather than a threat, for libraries interested in engaging in new thinking on information policy.
The Follett Lecture is free and open to the public. For more information, please contact the GSLIS at (708) 524-6845.
Valauskas is the curator of rare books at the Library of the Chicago Botanic Garden, and chief editor, founder, and co-publisher (with Esther Dyson and Rishab Ghosh) of First Monday, an Internet-only journal. He has served as assistant director of the library for the Charles E. Merriam Center for Public Administration at the University of Chicago, and head of public services for library and information services at the Superconducting Super Collider Laboratory in Texas. He has also been an instructor and guest lecturer in the Graduate School of Library and Information Sciences at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the International Center for Information Management Systems and Services at Copernicus University in Torun, Poland.
Valauskas is the second holder of Dominican University’s prestigious Follett Chair in Library
and Information Science, one of only four such chairs in the country. The position is endowed
through a gift of the Follett Corporation, a leading provider of education solutions, services and
products that empower schools, libraries, students and lifelong learners. The chair links GSLIS
more closely to the professional community through educational and service activities.
Accredited by the American Library Association, Dominican University’s Graduate School of
Library and Information Science has been educating future librarians and information professionals
in the Chicago area since the 1930s. GSLIS offers master's degrees in library and information
science and in knowledge management.
“As a student I wanted an intimate community. As an aspiring journalist I wanted a big city. Dominican gave me both—and so much more.”
Tracy Samantha
Schmidt
2005
TIME Magazine
