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Information Technology (IT) Division |
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Communications Division/SLA
Notes from Division Archives
Note: Updates to the archival listings are
pending. Information from 1995-present will be posted at a later date.
Suzanne
Lennon, Archivist
1977-1980
| 1980-1986 |
1986-1995
1977-1980
Officially, we began in the fall of 1977. The first
discussions were held at the 1976 Denver Conference when Kathleen Criner,
Barbara Fallon, and Susan Hill got together to compare notes.
Washington, DC area librarians began meeting to discuss the ways and
means of managing a telecommunications/communications library. Word
quickly spread to New York. Fifteen persons came together to petition
the SLA Board for Division status. The SLA Board approved the formation
of the "Telecommunications/Communications Provisional Division" at its
October, 1977 meeting. Full Division status was granted in January 1980.
By then the Division had grown to 180 members. The name was changed to
"Telecommunications Division in 1981.
(From "How it all began: the evolution of the
Telecommunications Division" by Susan Hill)
1980-1986
By 1983 the Division had grown to 260 members. The
1982-83 annual report noted that the definition and scope of
telecommunications had changed from just "nonprint/electronic media
(e.g. television/broadcasting) to include computer communication,
computerized library systems and a catch all for various
data/information systems."
In 1986, membership had grown to 353, with a 50/50 split
between primary and secondary membership. The increase was partially
ascribed to the growing role of telecommunications in the business
community. During this time, the Division embarked on a long-range
planning program. One of the first efforts was to investigate
teleconferencing technology as a means of disseminating SLA programs.
1986-1995
The first of the Division's popular informal
roundtables was held at the 1987 Anaheim Conference. The topic was the
development and organization of Telecommunications collections.
Membership in 1990 had stabilized at 284 members.
Pittsburgh Conference programming included: "Sources of Information in
Telecommunications," "High Definition Television," "Computer Viruses,"
and "Future Information Technologies."
The 1993 Cincinnati Conference programming continued to
reflect the rapid changes in the telecommunications field: "Here Before
You Know It," "LAN & WAN Workshop," "Teleprimer," and "RHCs and
Information Services."
By 1995, membership had climbed to 391 members. Division
archives were on microfiche. Division cosponsored a field trip to the
Montreal Expos baseball game (with the Baseball Caucus). The strategic
plan called for a 5%/year membership increase and the establishment of a
Telecommunications Division discussion list.
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