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An Agreement Between Dr. Louis Berger & The Berger Family and The Faculty of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering, Tufts University
1.0 Introduction
The fundamental mission and centuries-old tradition of
libraries and the library profession have been to provide
intellectual and physical access to and preservation of
the human record. While this will continue to be the fundamental
mission of libraries, the manner in which libraries fulfill
it is being changed by the rapid evolution of digital technologies.
The rapid emergence of digital technologies has begun to
alter the structure and process by which humans create,
find, use and re-use the information they need and want.
In particular, the digital library has the potential to:
- Provide information any time and any place,
- Provide access to collections of multimedia information
built upon the integration of text, image, graphics, audio,
video (and other continuous media),
- Support user-friendly personalization/customization
of information access and representation, including support
for "harvesting" relevant information and protection
from information overload,
- Be the heart of new technology-mediated structures to
radically enhance collaborative intellectual activities
such as research, learning, and design by reducing barriers
of distance (geographic and organizational) and time.
One of the challenges inherent in creating the digital
library is to retrain today's professionals to function
in tomorrow's world, while at the same time preparing today's
students and faculty to effectively use the technology.
The digital library is dependent upon hardware, software
and people. Of the three, hardware is the most developed.
Today's hardware is powerful and becoming more so almost
daily. Software always lags behind, but with the emergence
of tools such as the World Wide Web (WWW), etc., we can
transmit all types of information - text, images, and sound
- rapidly throughout the world. The successful integration
of these new technologies in the operation of the library
and into the classroom, however, requires a partnership
between talented, skilled faculty and librarians. Tufts
needs to insure that its faculty and librarians have the
skills necessary to navigate the new digital world and to
teach students to navigate in this world. The Berger Family
Technology Transfer Endowment will create the capability
for librarians and faculty to expand their understanding
of and ability to use digital information, to serve as guides
for their colleagues, and to apply their technology skills
to real issues in the University.
2.0 Description of Program
Earnings from the Berger Family Endowment will create a
fund to be used by librarians or teams of librarians and
faculty to learn more about the world of digital information
in order to integrate that knowledge into their work and
to transfer the knowledge to their colleagues. The funds
will be distributed through a competitive grant process
described below.
2.1 Eligibility
Arts, Sciences, and Engineering Library staff, teams of
Library staff and Arts, Sciences, and Engineering faculty
will be eligible to apply for annual funding from the Berger
Family Technology Transfer Endowment.
2.2 Selection Criteria
The Berger Family Technology Transfer Endowment is intended
to enable librarians and faculty to explore the world of
information technology in order to improve their skills,
to transfer their discoveries to their colleagues, and to
apply their discoveries to real issues within the University.
Given the goals of the endowment, the following criteria
will be used to review grant applications:
- Demonstrated potential for contributing value outside
the Tufts University community, especially within the
Boston Library Consortium
- Demonstrated potential for adding value to the secondary
education environment
- Demonstrated potential for successfully exploring new
technology
- Demonstrated potential for improving service to Arts,
Sciences, and Engineering
- Demonstrated potential for creating interdepartmental
approaches
- Demonstrated potential for building teams of librarians
and faculty
- Demonstrated potential for introducing information literacy
into the curriculum. Information literacy includes the
ability to search and retrieve information from computer
databases, navigate the internet, evaluate information
sources for relevancy, and synthesize information.
- Demonstrated potential for increasing productivity
- Demonstrated potential for improving understanding and
use of technology for all staff
- Demonstrated potential for transferring technology to
other staff, to faculty, and to students
- Demonstrated potential for enhancing the teaching role
of the library.
Each proposal will include a budget, time frame and list
of deliverables. It is expected that most projects will
be completed within one fiscal year, but that some projects
may require multiple years. Multi-year projects will be
evaluated annually to determine if progress justifies continued
funding.
2.3 Administration & Evaluation
The Berger Family Technology Transfer Endowment is administered by Tisch Library with the
assistance of the Berger Family Technology Transfer Endowment Advisory Board. Current members of the
board include Fredric S. Berger, P.E., Senior Vice President, Louis Berger International, Inc. in
Washington, DC; Dr. Gregory Crane, Winnick Family Chair in Technology & Entrepreneurship; Dr. Robin
Kanarek, Dean of the Graduate School of Arts & Sciences; Dr. Linda M. Abriola, Dean of
Engineering; Dr. Amy Friedlander, Senior Program Manager at Shinkuro in Washington, D.C.; Dr.
Carol Flynn, Chair of the Library Committee; Dr. Susan Martin, President of SKM Associates,
Inc. in Marston Mills, MA; Jo-Ann Michalak, Director of Tisch Library; and Dr. Don Weingust,
Chair of the Computing Facilities and Computer Usage Committee. The Advisory Board will
evaluate proposals, award funding for the successful proposals, and evaluate the program. At
an annual dinner grantees will report on the results of their work and the Advisory Board
will review the direction of the program. Members of the Berger Family will be invited to
attend annual dinners for the recognition of grantee.
2.4 Publicity
The results of each year's project will be submitted for
publication in professional journals as well as distributed
through Tufts publications. Acknowledgment of the Berger
Family Technology Transfer Endowment will be provided on
each product financed by or to which the Endowment contributed
funds.
2.5 Budget
The Berger Family Technology Transfer Endowment will support
release time for Library staff and/or faculty, travel, speakers
honorarium and expenses, expenses involved in organizing
a conference, software necessary for the project, etc. The
endowment will not support equipment purchase. Should revenue
accrue to a project or product funded by the Endowment,
an appropriate return will be reinvested in the Endowment.
3.0 Potential Projects
Examples of the types of projects of interest to the library,
include:
- Developing electronic course reserves
- Introducing Mosaic to the entire staff and all students
and faculty
- Creating and engineering electronic reference tool
- Working with other departments within Arts, Sciences,
and Engineering to publish information on the World Wide
Web
- Working with Academic Computing Services to develop
programs that build synergies among our staffs
4.0 Funding and Ultimate Disposition
The Berger Family Technology Transfer Endowment will be
funded initially with a pledge of $500,000 from Dr. Louis
Berger on behalf of the Berger Family. The first $250,000
of that pledge will be paid during June 1995 so that first
grants from income may be awarded during the University's
fiscal 1997. The second $250,000 from the Berger Family
will be issued in the form of a challenge incentive, payable
within five years of June 1995 or less, in annual payments
at the pace of $1 for every $2 in gifts, grants, or equipment
committed to this Berger Endowment, similar endowments for
technology transfer, or current-funded technology transfer
projects endorsed by the Advisory Board described in section
2.3, above.
Additional gifts and bequests, from the Berger Family and
any and all others, will be strongly encouraged so the benefits
of this technology transfer program can be sustained and
expanded over the course of time.
In the unlikely event this endowed fund is not used for
the purposes intended because those purposes are no longer
appropriate, necessary, practical, or possible, or if for
other substantial and lawful reason, the purpose cannot
be accomplished, then, in that event, the Trustees of Tufts
College may at their discretion use the income from the
fund for a substantially similar purpose or for such purposes
as will foster and promote the growth, progress, and general
welfare of the Faculty of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering.
Donors of majority portions of the fund, if available to
the University, would be consulted in these decisions.
For the Berger Family,
_________________________________________________________
Louis Berger Fredric S. Berger
For the Faculty of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering, Tufts
University,
_________________________________________________________
I. Melvin Bernstein, David R. McDonald, Director,
Vice President and Dean Information Technology & Libraries
January 30, 1995
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