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Interested in exploring how you can get on track with your research? Join
us for the LRRT Discussion Forum at Midwinter:

*LRRT Discussion Forum: Building & Sustaining Your Research Agenda*

*Sunday, January 26, 2014, 1:00pm - 2:30pm*

*Pennsylvania Convention Center 120C*

A panel of speakers at various stages of their careers will talk about how
they got started with their research and went on to establish productive
research agendas, highlighting tips that can help newer researchers be
successful. Attendees will also have the opportunity to discuss their own
challenges and aspirations and then work together with the panelists to
brainstorm strategies for getting and staying on track with their research.

*Panelists*

John Bertot is Professor and co-director of the Information Policy & Access
Center (iPAC) in the University of Maryland College Park iSchool. He is the
Editor of Government Information Quarterly and co-Editor of The Library
Quarterly. His research spans information and telecommunications policy,
e-government, government agency technology planning and evaluation, and
library planning and evaluation. His most recent project, funded by IMLS
and in partnership with the American Library Association and the
International City/County Management Association, is the Digital Inclusion
Study (digitalinclusion.umd.edu), which explores the roles of public
libraries in building digitally inclusive communities.

Carissa Phillips, Business and Finance Information Librarian and Associate
Professor of Library Administration at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign. Carissa’s past research has focused on students’
development of information literacy skills through participation in
experiential learning opportunities. Her articles have appeared in *the
Journal of Business and Finance Librarianship*, *Behavioral and Social
Sciences Librarian*, *Communications in Information Literacy*, and *Reference
Services Review*. Recently, she has been exploring new research interests
in network analysis and text analysis, as applied to digitized historical
business texts.

Robin Miller, Research & Instruction/Government Publications Librarian and
Assistant Professor at the McIntyre Library, University of Wisconsin-Eau
Claire. Robin’s research interests include quantitative and qualitative
assessment of student learning outcomes from research assignments, library
user experience, and exploration of the links between civic education and
ability to find and interpret government documents.