Conference. Record reproduced from SciFinder, with permission from the Chemical Abstracts Service.This paper shows how someone with an educational and research background in chemistry and the life sciences (BS and MS in Chemistry, PhD in Microbiology) could maintain for many years parallel interests in citation indexing that led to a seamless transition to a new career in information science and librarianship. From working at the lab bench and publishing in scientific journals, to joining a scientific publisher (ACS) as a librarian, and finally, to going back to academic life (University of Maryland, College Park) to manage a chemistry library and teach chemical information were career turns that required strong motivation and depended to a...
A paper delivered at the Future of Science Librarianship Contributed Papers session at the 2010 Annu...
Conference. Record reproduced from SciFinder, with permission from the Chemical Abstracts Service.Th...
The size, diversity, age, and pervasiveness of American chemistry make it an ideal subject for study...
Conference. Record reproduced from SciFinder, with permission from the Chemical Abstracts Service.Mo...
Conference. Record reproduced from SciFinder, with permission from the Chemical Abstracts Service.Pe...
Why might someone with science training pursue an information career? This secondary analysis of the...
The ceaseless growth of chemical information has created a need for chemical professionals who can o...
The transition from working in either a special library or corporate information center to an academ...
Librarian consultations with research groups, flipped classroom exercises, active learning, and Just...
Increasing concern has been expressed in the literature regarding the recruitment and retention of q...
Essay summarizing the history of Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) and recommendations for future dev...
The paper looks at published careers guides and how these portray the library/information science pr...
This study analyzes the editorials in Science and Nature published between 2000 and 2012 about c...
In the past, library users had to come to the library. Today, the library has to approach their poss...
This paper describes the career path of one woman scientist and identifies the factors that promote ...
A paper delivered at the Future of Science Librarianship Contributed Papers session at the 2010 Annu...
Conference. Record reproduced from SciFinder, with permission from the Chemical Abstracts Service.Th...
The size, diversity, age, and pervasiveness of American chemistry make it an ideal subject for study...
Conference. Record reproduced from SciFinder, with permission from the Chemical Abstracts Service.Mo...
Conference. Record reproduced from SciFinder, with permission from the Chemical Abstracts Service.Pe...
Why might someone with science training pursue an information career? This secondary analysis of the...
The ceaseless growth of chemical information has created a need for chemical professionals who can o...
The transition from working in either a special library or corporate information center to an academ...
Librarian consultations with research groups, flipped classroom exercises, active learning, and Just...
Increasing concern has been expressed in the literature regarding the recruitment and retention of q...
Essay summarizing the history of Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) and recommendations for future dev...
The paper looks at published careers guides and how these portray the library/information science pr...
This study analyzes the editorials in Science and Nature published between 2000 and 2012 about c...
In the past, library users had to come to the library. Today, the library has to approach their poss...
This paper describes the career path of one woman scientist and identifies the factors that promote ...
A paper delivered at the Future of Science Librarianship Contributed Papers session at the 2010 Annu...
Conference. Record reproduced from SciFinder, with permission from the Chemical Abstracts Service.Th...
The size, diversity, age, and pervasiveness of American chemistry make it an ideal subject for study...