It's Valentine's Day and the blog is so lucky to have this interview on one of the few "hot" but "wholesome" couples in Philippine Librarianship today. Outgoing Dean of UP SLIS Dean Igor Cabbab, and better half, Prof. Iyra Buenrostro answer three relevant questions on Philippine LIS education. The fourth question is very common and recalls to memory of high school slam book moments. But the last is definitely the most revealing of their dynamics as a couple.
Indeed, to quote a line from Fixer Upper (Frozen, 2013) love is a force that's powerful and strange!
a. What is the most pressing issue in LIS education today and why do you think it is so?
She said:
Curricular offerings that will meet the current demands of the industry. Though, there are already initiatives to align and standardize the courses offered in different library schools, and I think it's a good start. In relation to the curricular offerings, is of course, the need to have and offer graduate and post-graduate degrees in LIS. The UP SLIS (ILS then) has been offering LS subjects in the graduate level since 1952 and MLS in 1962, but until now we still don't have a PhD program in LIS. Obviously, we need to do something about it.
He said:
Current hiring / staff movement requirements based on global and local standards dictate that qualifications related to higher level administrative positions in LIS-related institutions (libraries, information centers, library schools, etc.) include the possession of post-baccalaureate degrees (MLIS and PhDs). MLIS is not a problem at the moment. PhD is a problem. In order for LIS Higher Education institutions to be able to address the offering of PhD in LIS they should have the faculty complement to back the degree offering. Sadly, only a few have PhDs in LIS / LS / Information in the country. This puts pressure on the academic personnel, it means that they should pursue the degrees first themselves.
b. How are LIS students different and the same from five years ago or from when you started teaching?
She said:
I started teaching in 2006, I was only 22 then. I think that's one of the big differences. They respect me more now (I hope) because I'm older. Haha! But seriously, kids (yeah kids) nowadays, are more dependent (on technology, etc.) yet trying to be (or appear) independent. I also think that they are more creative and matapang.
He said:
Pasaway pa rin mga students kahit anong dekada. XD One difference I noticed is that they are more technology-savvy. So instead of asking them to drop their pens and listen to me first, I now have to ask them to close their laptops and focus on the professor in front.
c. What is the teaching tool or gadget you can't live without?
She said:
I have two (Aside from my Gift of Gab. LOL). My laptop and white board marker.
He said:
My laptop, my flash drive, my dropbox, my facebook account and a couple of government-issued, quickly fading, lowest bidder white board markers.
d. Define love.
She said:
Ask my husband.
He said:
a. Two vowels, two consonants, two fools...
b. It means nothing to a tennis player...
c. Evol spelled backwards....
d. Back massages after a tiring day...
e. Still buying that Hello Kitty stuffed toy for Mami one day in 2010 even if it meant not having money for gas and lunch the next day. XD
About us
Prof. Iyra S. Buenrostro (BLIS 2005, cl; MLIS 2010, specialization in Archival Studies) is a full time faculty member of the UP School of Library and Information Studies since 2006 and she teaches courses on Library and Information Science, Records Management and Archives Administration. Before joining the academe, she was an Assistant Metadata Specialist in a Manila-based outsourcing firm that delivers digital archives services to different companies in the Middle East. At present, she is always invited by different professional library associations, schools and universities, and private organizations to talk about basic records management, core functions of archiving and archival training and education in the Philippines.
(Fashion peg: Zooey Deschanel and Anne Curtis. Has a lot of shoes and bags. Current obsessions: watches and lipsticks.)
Prof. Johann Frederick A. Cabbab (BLS 1994; MLS 1999, specialization in Information Systems and Literature for Children and Young Adults) is a full time faculty member and outgoing Dean of the UP School of Library and Information Studies. He was managing editor, writer and graphic artist for several children and young adult publications prior to rejoining the academe in 2007. He is actively involved in records digitization programs, most recent of which are for the University.
(Wants to get bigger, as in Brock Lesnar big. Skilltoy and weapon enthusiast: yoyo, spintop, diabolo, poi, firepoi, nunchucks, firechucks, balisong. Loves photography and russian m42 lenses.)
They blog at http://mamidadi.net and wreck havoc on Facebook most of the time.
Showing posts with label Dean Igor Cabbab. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dean Igor Cabbab. Show all posts
Friday, February 14, 2014
Friday, January 4, 2013
Librarians Read Series of 2010
In November 7, 2010, I asked five librarians to guest in the blog and share their reading choices over the years. This blog series was in part, a carry-over of Teen Read Week 2010. From November 8-12, 2012, one Filipino Librarian was featured in the blog. I am re-posting and curating the posts as part of the Filipino Librarian blog series I'll be reviving this month.
Would be cool if there's a book discussion group with librarians as members meeting once a month.
The five reading librarians are: Darrel Marco, Ann Grace Bansig, Dean Igor Cabbab, Fe Angela Verzosa, Von Totanes
Would be cool if there's a book discussion group with librarians as members meeting once a month.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
The Reading Librarian: Igor Cabbab
Librarians Read Series: Dean Igor Cabbab of the UP School of Library and Information Science.
Please note that he made the list before his formal appointment as dean of the UP SLIS. Either way, congrats to the new post and more power to UP SLIS!
Oh, I wasn't much of a book reader way back then. I remember reading the following:
1. The Prophet by Khalil Gibran (library book, I really don't know why I picked up that book O_o;;)
2. Encyclopedia Brown, The Hardy Boys Series and The Nancy Drew Series (borrowed from cousins)
3. Complete Works of Shakespeare (around the house, my parents)
4. Mythology, Edith Hamilton and Age of Fable, Thomas Bulfinch (around the house, my parents)
5. Le Morte d' Arthur, Sir Thomas Malory (around the house, my parents, yeah, Dragonball Z even before Son Goku! Knight gets stronger during the day, weaker at sunset, three days of fighting nonstop. ^_^)
6. The komiks section of Liwayway (every week when I visit my aunt, Agua Bendita anyone?)
7. A ton of Komiks!!! (while tending my lola's store, hospital overnights, long bus rides... Wakasan, Funny Komiks, etc.)
8. DC comics 12-issue arc "Crisis on Infinite Earths" (loaned from my hs pals, hey, multiple universes and a seemingly invulnerable superhero like Supergirl dying f***s up one's childhood like no other)
9. TinTin and Asterix the Gaul comics (library books)
10. Elizabeth Barrett Browning poems: Sonnets from the Portuguese (around the house)
Oh, and a ton of Sweet Valley High and Sweet Dreams(?) paperbacks my sister leaves in the toilet for reading (ei, they're there, need to read something ^_^;;)
Come to think of it, this probably explains a lot why I am what I am today.
Please note that he made the list before his formal appointment as dean of the UP SLIS. Either way, congrats to the new post and more power to UP SLIS!
Oh, I wasn't much of a book reader way back then. I remember reading the following:
1. The Prophet by Khalil Gibran (library book, I really don't know why I picked up that book O_o;;)
2. Encyclopedia Brown, The Hardy Boys Series and The Nancy Drew Series (borrowed from cousins)
3. Complete Works of Shakespeare (around the house, my parents)
4. Mythology, Edith Hamilton and Age of Fable, Thomas Bulfinch (around the house, my parents)
5. Le Morte d' Arthur, Sir Thomas Malory (around the house, my parents, yeah, Dragonball Z even before Son Goku! Knight gets stronger during the day, weaker at sunset, three days of fighting nonstop. ^_^)
6. The komiks section of Liwayway (every week when I visit my aunt, Agua Bendita anyone?)
7. A ton of Komiks!!! (while tending my lola's store, hospital overnights, long bus rides... Wakasan, Funny Komiks, etc.)
8. DC comics 12-issue arc "Crisis on Infinite Earths" (loaned from my hs pals, hey, multiple universes and a seemingly invulnerable superhero like Supergirl dying f***s up one's childhood like no other)
9. TinTin and Asterix the Gaul comics (library books)
10. Elizabeth Barrett Browning poems: Sonnets from the Portuguese (around the house)
Oh, and a ton of Sweet Valley High and Sweet Dreams(?) paperbacks my sister leaves in the toilet for reading (ei, they're there, need to read something ^_^;;)
Come to think of it, this probably explains a lot why I am what I am today.
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