<pclass="blog-post-meta">December 18, 2014 by <ahref="../../resume.html">Vicky Steeves</a> for the NDSR-NY Residents' Blog. <ahref="http://ndsr.nycdigital.org/party-on-amnh/">See original posting here.</a></p>
<p>Hello everyone! Vicky here to bring you some holiday cheer. I thought, since this is our last post before Hanukkah, Yule, Life Day, Festivus, Kwanzaa , Pancha Ganapati, Soyal, the Dongzhi Festival, Christmas, Newtonmas, Boxing Day, Omisoka, and New Years, I could wind down a busy few months by talking about the American Museum of Natural History party season!</p>
<p>Just about every day of the week, starting from the 10th of December to the 19th, there is a party at the AMNH. Each department has their own parties, some are small and attended mostly by people within the department; others are all staff events with food, drinks, and music.</p>
<pclass="blog-post-meta">November 10, 2014 by <ahref="../../resume.html">Vicky Steeves</a> for the NDSR-NY Residents' Blog. <ahref="http://ndsr.nycdigital.org/prove-yourself-needs-assessment-edition/">See original posting here.</a></p>
<p>What I’ve come to love about the library science field (which after years of waiting tables you’d think I’d hate) is the service aspect to everything we do. Librarians are intensely user-focused in all of our work: through the use of needs assessment surveys, we mold our libraries to what users want, expect, and need. We use the results to design programs, buy technology, even create positions within a library (YA librarian is a thing because of that!). Some common ways to implement a library assessment include focus groups, interviews, scorecards, comment cards, usage statistics from circulation and reference, and surveys sent to users via email or on paper.</p>
<ahref="posts/2014/nov10.html">Read More →</a>
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<h2class="blog-post-title">Science: The Final Frontier</h2>
<pclass="blog-post-meta">October 23, 2014 by <ahref="../../resume.html">Vicky Steeves</a> for the NDSR-NY Residents' Blog. <ahref="http://ndsr.nycdigital.org/science-the-final-frontier/">See original posting here.</a></p>
<p>Science: the final frontier. These are the voyages of Vicky Steeves. Her nine-month mission: to explore how scientific data can be preserved more efficiently at <ahref="http://www.amnh.org/our-research">the American Museum of Natural History</a>, to boldly interview every member of science staff involved in data creation and management, to go into the depths of the Museum where none have gone before.</p>
<p><arel="license"href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/"><imgalt="Creative Commons License"style="border-width:0"src="https://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-sa/4.0/88x31.png"/></a><br/><spanxmlns:dct="http://purl.org/dc/terms/"property="dct:title">Data, Science, & Librarians, Oh My!</span> by <axmlns:cc="http://creativecommons.org/ns#"href="http://vickysteeves.com/blog.html"property="cc:attributionName"rel="cc:attributionURL">Vicky Steeves</a> is licensed under a <arel="license"href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License</a></p>