The Virginia Library Leadership Academy (VALLA) evaluation team received a record-breaking 110 applications for the 2024 cohort. We are excited to announce the following 22 individuals whose applications strongly demonstrated VALLA’s core commitment to equity, accessibility, inclusivity; personal growth; connection building; and individualized leadership. Each of the 22 individuals selected to attend the 2024 cohort stood out as being diverse and primed to continue to develop their leadership skills and embark on their own, personal leadership journey.
Those accepted to the VALLA 2024 Cohort will begin their individualized leadership journey with a 3-day, in-person, intensive workshop, followed by a year’s worth of leadership topics and mentorship to continue to explore and develop their leadership capacity, at no cost to the participants, thanks to our generous sponsors.
The application evaluation process was anonymous, having redacted any personal identifying information, and multiple evaluators scored each application utilizing a predetermined rubric to ensure an objective decision was reached. The 22 chosen applicants represent different types of libraries: Academic (9), Public (12), and School (1), and a variety of backgrounds and lived experiences.
Please join us in congratulating the following individuals on their acceptance into the 2024 VALLA Cohort:
Andrea Abernathy, Virginia Beach Public Library
Diamond Chavis-Waller, Suffolk Public Library
Yinlin Chen, Virginia Tech University Libraries
Tara Drayton, Sussex Central Middle School
Jane Gagne, Suffolk Public Library
Brea Gilliam, Prince George’s County Public Library
Jackson Hoch, Virginia Tech University Libraries
Amanda Jones, Loudoun County Public Library
Dana Ladd, Ph.D., Virginia Commonwealth University Libraries
Shawna McGuffie, Hampton University Libraries
Wen Nie Ng, Virginia Tech University Libraries
Kristin Noell, Massanutten Regional Library
Haley Painter, Bland County Public Library
Clenise Platt, Virginia Beach Public Library
Elyse Ridder-Roe, University of Mary Washington Libraries
Marisa Rodriguez, Fairfax County Public Library
Kat Seastead, Prince William Public Library
Brittany Smith, George Washington University Libraries
Lauren Su, William & Mary Libraries
Jennifer Switzer, Mary Baldwin University Libraries
Mirna Turcios, Prince William Public Library
Aaron Wells, Central Rappahannock Regional Library
Published January 9, 2024
2023 VLA Scholarship Basket Raffle Winners
The Scholarship Committee and I say, "Thank you!" to everyone who showed support for this year's Basket Raffle! Many of you showed out this year and donated the most imaginative and inspiring baskets which resulted in $5,805 raised for scholarships. We had 194 people purchase 26,710 tickets for a chance to win one of 26 baskets. This organization thanks you all for your dedication to helping fundraise for future librarians. You can read all about our scholarship recipients here. - Quettara Drayton, 2024 Scholarship Committee Chair
List of winners:
Carol Turrentine: Jason Reynolds Basket Kyle Binaxas: Life of a Manager Basket Margot Manburg: VIVA Supports fREADom Basket Elizabeth Insley: Deluxe Nancy Pearl Librarian Action Figure Maryke Barber: Bose Soundlink Revolve II Maryke Barber: Adult Graphic Novel basket Margot Manburg: Youth Graphic Novel basket Anna Robertson: Pride Basket Shari Henry: Librarian Barbie basket Nan Carmack: Things to Enjoy basket Mary Kitiyakara: Edgar Allen Poe's Ravenous Basket Keith Weimer: William & Mary Charcuterie Basket Levi Carter: Friends of the Henrico County Public Library Maryke Barber: Harrisonburg Farmers Market basket Erin Guyer: Do What You Please: A post-conference relaxation basket Sherida Bradby: Executive Committee Conference Basket Alexandra Hall: Swag Across the State basket Leith Alvaro: Coffee, Craft, and Create basket Wayne Keith: Knitting Basket Lisa Cheshire: Rest Your Bones Halloween Basket Anne-Marie Parrish: Triple Delight: Cupcakes, Books, Puzzles basket Katherine Vaughan: Intellectual Freedom Basket #1 Julie Arendt: Intellectual Freedom Basket #2 Babak Zarin: Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators basket Jimmy Ghaphery: Cooking with Alice basket Shari Henry: Pumpkin Spice Everything
Celebrate Banned Books Week October 1-7, 2023
The VLA Intellectual Freedom Committee invites you to honor Banned Books Week, Oct. 1-7, 2023, themed "Let Freedom Read" by the American Library Association's 2023. Many libraries across the Commonwealth of Virginia will be hosting displays of banned books— books that while not completely eliminated from publication or distribution have been challenged and at times removed from libraries by government order. That some libraries find it politically unsafe to speak of “Banned Books” displays and need to use other terminology, such as "First Amendment" displays, provides a renewed justification for setting apart this week. Many libraries are also offering programming and activities, such as readings from banned books, to raise awareness about efforts to censor and the importance of standing for the right to read as a basic First Amendment and Civil right of all Americans.
We also invite you to read Nan Carmack's, VLA President-Elect, statement about Banned Books Week drafted by VLA’s President-Elect Nan Carmack, below.
Banned Books Week Oct 1 -7. 2023 - Nan Carmack, President-Elect, Virginia Library Association
Banned Books Week serves not only to celebrate literature that disrupts comfortable thinking but also the very first idea that the founders of the United States of America added to our Constitution: The First Amendment. In asserting the freedom of speech to every person, our founders held sacred the notion that no one should be prevented from expressing or consuming ideas that others may find objectionable. Books that fall on the lists of banned or challenged books demonstrate the attempt by some to silence an author from expressing their ideas, their lived experience, their imagination. Bans and challenges also attempt to thwart the freedom of readers to explore the same ideas, experiences, and imaginings.
Dr. Rudine Bishop Simms, professor emeritus at Ohio State University, wrote a famed essay in which she likens books to “mirrors, windows, and sliding glass doors.” These analogies demonstrate how literature can provide the reader with a reflection of themselves, a window into which they can view the experience of another, and very special books that allow us to step into another world entirely. In doing so, books have the power to help folks grow their capacity for empathy, understanding, and compassion.
This week, we celebrate not only the value of literature that challenge our own experiences, but the American ideal of the freedom of speech, in which no one person or entity can tell us what we can and cannot read. This week, we celebrate the League of Women Voters standing up for the Freedom to Read. Which book will you choose to read in celebration?
356 unique book titles were challenged across Virginia in the first 8 months of 2023, according to the American Library Association. That's nearly twice the 182 titles that came under fire in the state in 2022, which was double the previous year's number.
-October 3, 2023
Intellectual Freedom Display Contest 2023 sponsored by the VLA Intellectual Freedom CommitteeHas your library created a display or program during 2023 that promotes the ideas of intellectual freedom and the freedom to read, whether for Banned Books Week, Freedom of Information Day, Sunshine Week, Choose Privacy Week, academic freedom, or any other topic related to the First Amendment and censorship?
The Intellectual Freedom Committee is sponsoring a contest to recognize efforts to support access to information in Virginia’s libraries. We encourage you to submit your best activities, displays, events, and programs for this contest. Awards will be presented to both an academic library and a public library. Here is the link to the contest application form.
The IFC will review all submissions and choose the winners, which will be announced during the annual VLA Conference in October. We encourage (but do not require) both photographs and a narrative about your event. The deadline for submissions is Thursday, October 12, 2023. If you have questions or cannot access the contest form in Google, please contact Rebecca Lamb.
Winners will receive a certificate and bragging rights for a year. Good luck!
We are pleased to announce the application for the Virginia Library Leadership Academy (VALLA), 2024 cohort is now available.
Who:
We are looking for:
Individuals who are interested in developing their leadership skills over the next year, regardless of where they are in their leadership journey or position in a library.
A diverse group of individuals who would like to grow as library leaders across Virginia and are willing to invest in themselves through this process over the next year.
Individuals who are willing to learn from others, build their leadership network, and view leadership development through an Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion lens.
When: Sunday, March 10, 2024 - Wednesday, March 13, 2023
Where:
In-person workshop: Hotel Madison & Shenandoah Valley Conference Center 710 S. Main Street, Harrisonburg, VA 2281 Post-workshop Mentor Sessions: Zoom
Cost: Free to 2024 participants, thanks to generous sponsorships by individuals and library organizations.
Deadline to apply: November 15, 2023
Has your interest been peaked? Click here for more information about the 2024 VALLA Cohort. A link is available to the application through the 2024 VALLA Cohort page, or you can click here to apply now.
If you have any questions, please contact the 2024 VALLA Planning Chair: