Not long ago, the JKM Library posed a question to the Chatham community:
where do you like to volunteer? We received lots of awesome responses, including some folks asking for specific suggestions and other folks offering them up readily.
We’re proud to see that this is a community who enjoys giving back.
Below are the responses you offered along with links so others can look into how they too can get involved. We hope that this inspires you to spend a free afternoon offering your time to an organization you feel passionately about over your Spring Break next week!
Animal Friends: This organization cares for homeless animals and provides animal healthcare, training, food, therapy, education, and more!
Best Buddies: Best Buddies International is a nonprofit organization dedicated to establishing a global volunteer movement that creates opportunities for one-to-one friendships, integrated employment, leadership development, and inclusive living for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Carnegie Public Library: Want to give back to you community through a local public library? Check out the list of ways you can help at a CLP branch local to you!
Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank: The food bank aims to feed people in need and mobilize the community to eliminate hunger. They have multiple ways you can get involved, and each is important to their goals.
PAAR (Pittsburgh Action Against Rape): PAAR has offered services for more than 43 years, making it one of the oldest rape crisis centers in the country. Train to provide crisis support via their hotline (1-866-363-7273), offer support in person at police stations and emergency departments, and provide education and coping strategies to survivors. Help PAAR assist victims of sexual abuse and end sexual violence in our community.
Pittsburgh Center for Creative Reuse: This local non-profit inspires creativity, conservation, and community engagement through reuse. They operate a non-traditional art supply shop where people can donate used art and craft supplies, as well as shop for these unique items all in the same location. They also facilitate hands-on creative programming that educates the public about the benefits of reuse for the environment, community, and self. They
have many ways you can volunteer!
Days for Girls: This organization makes it possible for women and girls around the world to live their lives uninterrupted by their menstrual cycles. In some places, women and girls do not have the resources or ability to access personal hygiene products, but Day for Girls makes reusable flannel pads and education for menstruating folks so they do not have to miss school or work days and can work toward their life goals uninterrupted and with less risk. Volunteer to sew reusable pads or distribute kits!
Prevention Point Pittsburgh: Prevention Point Pittsburgh (PPP) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing health empowerment services to people who use drugs. PPP offers needle exchange services, comprehensive case management services, assistance to drug treatment, individualized risk-reduction counseling, health education, condom and bleach distribution, overdose prevention with naloxone distribution, and free HIV, Hepatitis C, and STD screening in collaboration with Allies for Health + Wellbeing, formerly the Pittsburgh AIDS Task Force. Contact them to see how you can help.
Humane Animal Rescue: One of the largest animal welfare associations in PA tasked with providing enhanced services to domestic and wild animals alike. They provide all aspects of care to abandoned, neglected, and injured animals; reunite lost pets with their caregivers or seek new
families for them; educate the community on humane care and interactions with all animals with the goal of reducing pet overpopulation and negative relationships with native wildlife; reinforce a standard of living for animals and prevent cruelty; and provide assistance and medical care to injured, orphaned, or ill native PA wildlife with a goal of returning them to their natural habitat.
PMI Pittsburgh: Are you a project manager or are looking to enter that field? PMI Pittsburgh allows project manager professionals to collaborate and gain value in professional development locally, nationally and internationally.
Little Sisters of the Poor: The Little Sisters of the Poor is a Catholic organization that offers support and care to impoverished elderly populations. Volunteer to support the organization and help those they seek to care for.
Hospital Elder Life Program (HELP): HELP is designed to prevent delirium in patients age 70 and older who are hospitalized at UPMC Shadyside. Volunteers spend quality time interacting with patients, offering services to improve the quality of the patient’s stay, while watching for signs of delirium.
412 Food Rescue: 412 Food Rescue aims to combat two issues: food waste and food apartheids. Volunteers take extra food from various business and institutions and redistributes it where it is most needed. Volunteers also help with education and gardening programs, events, administrative tasks, and more!
Lawrence County Historical Society: Lawrence county is located over an hour north of Pittsburgh. Its historical society preserves its history and historical sites, acquires artifacts related to county history, and encourages interest in county history with education and events.
Animal Friends of Westmorland: Another wonderful Animal Friends group, this organization helps abandoned, abused and neglected animals. They also educate the public to spay and neuter, spread awareness on embracing pet adoption, and inspire others to become animal advocates.
Children’s Institute of Pittsburgh: This local organization offers innovative and integrated health care, education, and social services for children and youth with special health care needs.
Girl Scouts: Girl Scouts provides leadership and community development for young girls and teens through immersive programs. Volunteer to give back to the next generation!
East End Cooperative Ministry: EECM supports its community from many angles. It offers programming for children and teens, soup kitchen services, shelters and housing, health recovery services, therapy, and much more. They offer many ways for community members to volunteer.
Planned Parenthood: PP offers affordable and accessible reproductive health services and education, birth control, cancer and STD screenings, and more! Folks of all genders are eligible for their services.
Climate Reality: This organization is dedicated to community action concerning climate change both locally, nationally, and globally. Join the local chapter to get involved today!
The National Aviary: Located right here in Pittsburgh is our country’s national Aviary! Volunteer to help those visiting from near and far make the most out of their visit to this amazing institution.
Jubilee Soup Kitchen: This local soup kitchen provides hot meals every day to those who have fallen on hard times. Volunteers help make them a success!
Haiti: Haiti has been devastated by natural disaster time and time again. There are several organizations set up for those interested in taking a trip to the country to help them get back on their feet, but make sure you do your research before signing up! Habitat for Humanity in Haiti is a good
option.
Local Churches: If you belong to a religious organization, there are usually volunteering opportunities set up through them in your community. This is a very easy and fun way for you to give back to your community with folks you already know for a cause you are passionate about. Check in with your faith leader to see how you can get involved!
Literary programs: There are a plethora of excellent literary-based programs working locally, nationally, and globally to promote reading and literacy to a variety of populations. You can volunteer to make sure underprivileged children get free books, prisoners get access to important books and information in their prison libraries, you can support the creation of literary programs around the country and around the work, or you could volunteer to do story time at your local public library. Interested in volunteering for a literary program but don’t know where to start looking? Ask JKM Librarian Jocelyn Codner!
Political campaigns: Perhaps folks weren’t serious when they mentioned volunteering for certain political campaigns on our question sheets, but regardless of their intentions, volunteering for the political campaign of a candidate you back is a valuable use of time. This is especially true for local campaigns where the immediate impact can be great. Take some time to familiarize yourself with the local races occurring and the candidates running. Maybe volunteer to work a phone bank or canvass a community on the weekends! Change starts on the local level.
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Thanks for the suggestion! Thus far we’ve only offered one of these types of classes, so it was a new experience for us. We quickly learned that it is not possible to cover more than one tool in a class if we want to be able to provide extensive hands-on experience. We will be offering more classes soon (see below) – some on Zotero, some on Mendeley. We hope to see you then!
- Library Workshop: Zotero March 27 (Tuesday): 11:30am to 12:20 April 5 (Thursday): 5:15pm to 6:15
- Library Workshop: Mendeley March 28 (Wednesday): 5:15pm to 6:15
Registration is required and capped at 10 people, so sign up now on myChatham Happenings! Working on research and have PDFs saved all over the place? Do you keep misplacing the articles you’ve found? There’s an easier way to keep track! Attend this workshop to learn more about Zotero, a tool that you can use both to keep all your research in one location and to create citations. For those of you who cannot make one of these sessions: Both of these resources offer videos for you to view in order to see how to use them (Mendeley videos, Zotero videos). The library is also in the process of creating an introductory video which we hope to make available on our page of How To Videos soon. These two tools both have their pros and cons; for example, depending on the library database, one may work better than the other. A comparison chart of general features is also available.
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Thanks for all the great feedback on our “I wish my library would…” poster! We have posted print responses where the poster used to be and will be posting a series of responses here on our blog as well. Request for More Electronic Resources We are always striving to provide you with the online resources you need. We added ScienceDirect over the summer, Environment Complete in the fall, and we will be adding America: History and Life with Full Text at the beginning of April. We are looking at others for the next fiscal year as well. The cost of these resources, especially those with full text, can be prohibitive. In 2011-12, we spent over $200,000 dollars on online resources alone. These resources are not one-time fees. We have to pay for yearly access and the price goes up every year. One of our full-text databases cost us $27,000 this academic year. However, if you know of resources you would like us to look into, please let us know! Also, if we don’t have access to a particular journal, magazine, or newspaper, you can still get articles from it by using Interlibrary Loan – articles usually arrive within 2-5 business days and most are PDFs that we send right to your email. It’s also a free service for you to use – we don’t pass any of the costs onto you.
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Trial to Education Complete
The library currently has a 60-day trial to a resource from EBSCOhost called Environment Complete. This
database contains full text for over 900 journals and provides informational access to a wealth of other journals.
According to EBSCO’s website, Environment Complete covers topics related to “agriculture, ecosystem
ecology, energy, renewable energy sources, natural resources, marine & freshwater science, geography, pollution
& waste management, environmental technology, environmental law, public policy, social impacts, urban
planning, and more.”
How You Can Help
We need your feedback! Let us know what you think of this resource. Will it be helpful to you in your
research? Does it provide access to information you cannot find elsewhere? Please email Amy Lee Heinlen
at aheinlen@chatham.edu or submit a comment through our comment form, and let us know what you think.
Your feedback will greatly help us as we decide whether or not this resource would be a good addition to our
collection.
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From time to time, students submit suggestions that the library add more popular fiction books. We try to add fiction, but it is a low priority for us since we are here primarily to support the college curriculum. We mainly try to collect those titles that are both popular and also seem like they will have lasting value as literature. Here are some other options: 1. Check out the Popular Reading Display on the main floor of the library (near the New Books – see map). 2. On the third floor of the library, try looking under call numbers like 811 (poetry), 812 (drama/plays), and 813 (fiction – 813.54 has quite a few). 3. You can get many popular titles through E-ZBorrow, which allows you to request books from over 50 academic libraries. The books will usually arrive in 2-5 business days. 4. Visit one of the many branches of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. They have a wonderful selection of fiction, along with audiobooks, movies, magazines, and much more. Chatham students are eligible for a library card – see the information located here. Have a suggestion for the library? Submit it using our online form, or drop it in the Library Suggestion Box on the main floor of the library (to the left of the elevator).
As we live more and more of our lives on the Internet, it’s important to take personal digital privacy seriously. Hacking techniques can be very sophisticated, and a breech in your privacy can have devastating effects. Learning how to protect your data and your privacy online, as well as how to develop good digital hygiene, is becoming more and more important.
Last semester (fall 2019), we conducted an informal #BeCyberSmart survey of our patrons, asking which level of familiarity they have with personal digital privacy and which actions they take to protect their personal information online.
Patrons were asked to select a sticker color that corresponded with their knowledge level and place those stickers in the columns representing actions they have taken to protect their personal digital privacy. Below are the results of this interactive informal survey.
While most participants have indicated that they know at least a little bit about personal digital privacy and cybersecurity, there is always room for more knowledge! The more you know, the better able you are to protect yourself online. Below we’ve compiled a quick list of resources for you to use when going about a personal digital detox or increasing your personal digital privacy.
1) Use a password manager like Bitwarden or LastPass.
2) Go through the Data Detox Kit: https://datadetoxkit.org/en/home
From the website… “The Data Detox Kit’s clear suggestions and concrete steps help people harness all aspects of their online lives, making more informed choices and changing their digital habits in ways that suit them.”
Follow simple step-by-step guides to cleaning up your digital presence and locking down your digital privacy
Includes tips and tricks for how to maintain your privacy and good digital hygiene
Offers alternatives to popular apps that do not respect your privacy or pose threats to your privacy
Developed by Berlin-based organization called Tactical Tech in partnership with Mozilla
3) Swap out Google for DuckDuckGo: https://duckduckgo.com/
DuckDuckGo is a privacy-focused search engine that runs off of the same search index as Bing, which means it isn’t quite as intuitive as Google, but your
information stays safe!
It does NOT track your searches
It has a very useful browser plug-in that will “grade” each website you visit in terms of how well that website will protect your personal digital information:
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/duckduckgo-for-firefox/
It blocks ads for you. We still recommend adding additional ad blockers (The Data Detox Kit has great suggestions)
When coupling DuckDuckGo with Firefox, you’re off to a good start in terms of protecting your privacy while using the Internet
4) Feeling really adventurous? Try out Brave Browser: https://brave.com/
From the website… “You deserve a better Internet. So we reimagined what a browser should be. It begins with giving you back power. Get unmatched speed,
security and privacy by blocking trackers. Earn rewards by opting into our privacy-respecting ads and help give publishers back their fair share of Internet revenue.”
Brave goes beyond protecting your privacy. It revolutionizes how companies monetize their online presence and put that power in your hands. Instead of suffering through ads, you get to decide where your money goes. And if you decide you’re ok with ads, you get rewarded for it!
Brave does not collect your data and gives you incredible control over your own Internet experience
5) Visit the Electronic Frontier Foundation and read up on current affairs concerning personal digital privacy online and more: https://www.eff.org/issues/net-neutrality From the website… “The Electronic Frontier Foundation is the leading nonprofit organization defending civil liberties in the digital world. Founded in 1990, EFF champions user privacy, free expression, and innovation through impact litigation, policy analysis, grassroots activism, and technology development. We work to ensure that rights and freedoms are enhanced and protected as our use of technology grows.”
They advocate for safe, secure, and equitable access to Internet resources for all Take advantage of their numerous tools and additional resources to protect Internet users’ privacy: https://www.eff.org/pages/tools
Volunteer with the EFF and contribute even more!
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