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January
2004 was momentous for SIS alumna M.J. Tooey MLS, AHIP.
On January 1 she was tapped to become the Executive Director
of the Health Sciences and Human Services Library (HS/HSL)
at the University of Maryland in Baltimore . And then,
in mid January, M.J. was elected to serve as President
of the Medical Library Association (MLA) from 2005 to 2006.
Of this latest honor University of Maryland , Baltimore
President David J. Ramsay, DM, DPhil. said, "M.J. Tooey continues to be recognized on
both a local and national level as someone who demonstrates
a strong commitment to academic research, education,
and service." M.J. gives much of the credit for her successes today
to her Pitt education and especially to her advisor Professor
Allen Kent, now retired, who stressed the need to bring
information, people, and technology together. At Pitt,
she learned that service is the hallmark of a great library, "Professor
Kent was super flexible with his time, demonstrating
that service was at very the heart of what we were learning," recalls
M.J. Her career spanned teaching and school library jobs
in public schools in Pittsburgh's eastern suburbs and
at Clarion State College (now Clarion University of Pennsylvania)
before she became a medical librarian at Allegheny General
Hospital in Pittsburgh, and later, at Union Memorial
Hospital in Baltimore. She soon moved to HS/HSL and in
the 18 years of her tenure, M.J. has followed a service
oriented philosophy of building relationships with clinicians,
students, and the general public which has helped to
make HS/HSL a trusted information partner.
When she started at HS/HSL in 1986, as the lead trainer
for the Information Management Education Program she
reached out to reference librarians serving the University
of Maryland health sciences and hospital who were just
starting to use networked computers. Those reference
librarians would then train faculty and students on the
use of the then new electronic resources. "Things have
really evolved," says M.J., "back in those days we had
just a few end user services, and the connections were
over phone lines at 300 baud!" Today M.J. sees information
professionals sifting through a deluge of information
to deliver meaningful services. A rapidly changing academic
publishing environment, new non-published forms of dissemination
of research, and web searching tools are all part of
the challenge. "How do you evaluate information?" asks
M.J. When a person searches for 'heart attack' and Google
returns approximately 5,600,000 results, "it's librarians
that help people select good health information, after
all, patient knowledge about disease helps the care process."
M.J. maintains close ties to SIS through her former
instructor Associate Professor Ellen Detlefsen. M.J.
says Ellen has become her mentor and friend and that
the two are sure to enjoy seeing each other at professional
conferences a couple of times each year. |
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