Ohio Deaf History Month celebrates deaf history and the contributions of the hearing impaired and Deaf community to society. The General Assembly of the State of Ohio passed legislation in 2017 designating the period beginning March 13 and ending April 15 as Ohio Deaf History Month. The State Library of Ohio Board proclaimed the period beginning March 13 and ending April 15, 2023 as Ohio Deaf History Month and encourages Ohio libraries to display materials and host deaf awareness activities to highlight the significance of the many outstanding contributions made by Deaf and hearing pioneers, particularly in Deaf Education.

 

The State Library of Ohio has a longstanding partnership with the Ohio School for the Deaf, working together to provide information for and about people who are Deaf or hard of hearing. The Center for Outreach Services located at the Ohio School for the Deaf, and the State Library of Ohio collaborate to bring a collection of Deafness and interpreting-related materials to all Ohioans. Through this partnership, OSD purchases and provides materials to the State Library. In return, the State Library maintains and provides easy access to this collection through the State Library’s online catalog. This collection is targeted toward interpreters, American Sign Language students, parents, and professionals working within the Deaf community. The Center for Outreach Services provides resources of interest to K-12 Deaf educators, interpreters and parents in a variety of formats (books, DVDs, CD-ROMs, VHS tapes). The State Library of Ohio catalogues and maintains circulation of these items for use by individuals across the state. The Deafness Collection currently contains over 400 items. To browse available materials at the State Library, click here for the Deafness & Outreach collection.

 

In addition, the Ohio Digital Library includes a collection of ebooks and videos about Deaf culture and American Sign Language (ASL). The collection includes fiction and non-fiction for children and adults and covers many aspects of Deaf culture and ASL including language, history, education and instruction.

 

Download a 8.5” x 11” sign about Ohio Deaf History Month (PDF).

 

Does your library serve summer meals/snacks, or are you interested in being a meal site or supporting other meal sites in your area? Many libraries in Ohio and around the USA participate in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), a USDA-funded program that provides free meals and snacks to children ages 0-18 in communities with high levels of need.

 

The need for this program remains great. In the wake of the pandemic, economic instability and food insecurity continue to hurt Ohioans. Additionally, SNAP emergency allotments ended today (March 1), impacting over 670,000 Ohio households with an average cut of approximately 30% of food purchasing power per person.

 

 

Libraries and SFSP are a great fit! The library is a known, trusted, accessible community center which is known for giving stuff out for free and has no stigma of “handout” attached to it.

Libraries are also justly famous for drop-in enrichment programming, which increases the appeal and use of SFSP sites.

 

SFSP is good for the library too. Besides the obvious benefits of addressing hunger and supporting vulnerable youth, participation gives libraries:

Access to new user groups, especially underserved and marginalized populations

Increased visibility of the library as a community asset

Opportunities for new partnerships

Positioning of the library as an important stakeholder in community well-being and positive child outcomes

Support for summer library programming through increased attendance

 

Interested?

If you are already an SFSP site (or have been a site in the past), work with your regular sponsor to prepare for summer 2023.

 

If you want to become an SFSP site*, first find out if you are in an eligible area. Eligibility is based on the economic conditions of a geographic area, measured by school data or census data. Use the USDA's Capacity Builder Map to see if you are in an eligible area: www.fns.usda.gov/capacitybuilder. When the map loads, scroll down and select “FY2023 FNS SFSP CACFP Eligibility.”

 

If you are not in an eligible area, see the Libraries and Summer Food guide (below) for alternatives to SFSP and other ways to help. If you are near eligible areas, contact the Ohio Department of Education (ODE) Office of Nutrition to find out if you may be eligible through Averaged Area Eligibility.

 

If you are in an eligible area, identify and contact a local SFSP sponsor* about becoming a site. The USDA Capacity Builder map can show you existing sites and their sponsors. I can also help you identify existing sponsors in your area, so feel welcome to email me.

 

If there is no sponsor in your area to ask, you might contact your school district administrative office, to discuss the possibility of their becoming an SFSP sponsor and using your library as a site. Or contact the food bank that serves your area. Or contact the Children’s Hunger Alliance, which can serve as an SFSP sponsor in all 88 Ohio counties for distribution of shelf-stable meals and snacks that meet nutrition guidelines. You may also complete the ODE Potential Sponsor Survey. The ODE administers the SFSP statewide and identifies new sponsors and sites through this survey. You can complete the survey to make your interest known to the ODE even if you just want to be a site and not a sponsor*.

 

* A note about SFSP sites and sponsors:

Sites are the locations where meals/snacks are served. Nearly all participating libraries are sites (not sponsors), or partner to bring enrichment activities to an existing site.

Sponsors handle the financial, administrative and food service responsibilities for SFSP in an area. Sponsors may contract with food service providers and do not have to prepare the food themselves. Sponsors are reimbursed for all expenses by the USDA. A few libraries are sponsors as well as sites.

 

Expansion of the program is particularly needed in southern Ohio counties, where many families struggle with food insecurity, as well as in rural communities statewide, and areas where migrant families reside.

 

For further information, No Kid Hungry’s Center for Best Practices offers a Summer and Afterschool Meals resource just for libraries. This webpage houses information for libraries nationwide on SFSP and the Child and Adult Care Food Program At-Risk Afterschool Meal Program (CACFP At-Risk, or Afterschool Meals). Planning and implementation resources are also available, along with training opportunities.

 

The No Kid Hungry resource aligns with and links to the Collaborative Summer Library Program’s Libraries & Summer Food how-to guide, which is a thorough, clear step-by-step guide for libraries wishing to participate in or support summer meals.

Also, the State Library’s SFSP webpage provides guidance for Ohio libraries and a collection of Ohio-specific links, instructions, and ideas.

 

 

The Ohio Digitization Interest Group welcomes presentation proposals for our next virtual meeting, held Tuesday, March 21, 2023. The theme of the March meeting will be managing community-generated digital content.

 

Managing digital materials created within specific community contexts is an area of increasing interest and research within the cultural heritage sector and presents both myriad challenges and exciting opportunities. We welcome presentation proposals from colleagues from all types of Ohio cultural heritage organizations who are interested in sharing their experiences in this burgeoning area of digital cultural heritage work! These will be short, 10/15-minute presentations that can touch on a wide range of topics relating to managing and curating community-generated digital content, including but not limited to:

 

Processes for transferring and accessioning digital content from community members

Leveraging community knowledge to enhance descriptive metadata for digital materials

Modifying “typical” institutional standards and practices to respect the priorities and needs of historically marginalized or underrepresented communities (i.e. traditional knowledge labels, customized controlled vocabularies, providing description in multiple languages, limiting access to those within specific communities, etc.)

Working with community members to communicate and reconcile issues relating to copyright and intellectual property

Working within various collection stewardship scenarios, such as post-custodial models

Navigating the complexities of providing public access to community-generated materials

 

Proposals from all types of organizations are welcome! We’re interested in hearing from you regardless of how far along you are in your community digital archiving projects; whether you are just getting started or are several years into your project, your experience will have much to offer the OhioDIG community.

 

There will be roughly 45 minutes reserved for presentations split among the speakers, with a Q&A after. 

 

Proposal submissions will be accepted until midnight (Eastern) Wednesday, March 15th. Please submit proposals to meeting organizers Nick Pavlik (npavlik@bgsu.edu) or Penelope Shumaker (pshumaker@library.ohio.gov).

 

Theme: Managing Community-Generated Digital Content

Program Contacts: Nick Pavlik (npavlik@bgsu.edu) or Penelope Shumaker (pshumaker@library.ohio.gov)

Location: Virtual Meeting via Zoom

Date & time: Tuesday, March 21, 10:30am-noon(ish)

Agenda:

- 10:30-11:30: Presentations (45 minutes) and Q&A (15 minutes)

- 11:30-noon: All attendee update

 

All are welcome to attend and submit proposals! Learn more about us at https://ohiodig.org/

 

 




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