06:00:04 Arlene Weible : Feel free to chat any questions you have! 06:11:01 susanne: GIO is a great service, and wonderful practice with some challenging questions 06:12:27 Jennifer boettcher: Another myth is there is no state or local government information. A lot of federal programs cover state and local information, you can pull out your community data. 06:12:29 Arlene Weible : http://www.govtinfo.org/ 06:13:51 Jen Kirk, Utah State University: What are your go-to sources for these lovely full color scanned documents? 06:15:31 Lara Flint: Mine for the scanned posters were the University of Nebraska Government Comics collection, the University of Iowa Government Posters, and the University of Maryland Government Posters 06:16:41 Lara Flint: Also love to search for Federal agencies' image galleries - most of them have them and you can get great photos 06:16:58 Arlene Weible : Nebraska site: https://mediacommons.unl.edu/luna/servlet/UNL~113~113 06:17:04 Jennifer boettcher: I'm getting push back on "government information is not bias" how do I address this attitude? 06:18:09 Connie Williams: where were the coloring books from? 06:18:21 Eric Cartier: The UMD collection is great. I managed the Digitization Center when my student assistants scanned the last quarter of this collection: https://digital.lib.umd.edu/usposters 06:18:36 Arlene Weible : Iowa poster site: https://digital.lib.uiowa.edu/islandora/object/ui:gpc/ 06:18:54 Shari Laster: Kudos to the NCLA-GRS for the Help! series, they are trailblazers! 06:19:30 Arlene Weible : Here are some: 06:19:30 Jennifer boettcher: Both of these programs are looking for speakers too. They are easy to work with. 06:19:33 Arlene Weible : https://libguides.unf.edu/govdocs/coloringbooks 06:21:41 Arlene Weible : https://cornerstone.lib.mnsu.edu/lib-services-govdoc-displays/ 06:24:46 susanne: What about not being allowed to send out information about docs because they are too political? 06:24:51 Denise Jones: Help I am an accidental government information librarian webinars: https://nclaonline.wildapricot.org/Help!-Webinars 06:25:25 susanne: Your supervisor 06:25:59 Jennifer boettcher: GovInfo was always my authoritive source, now I should tell them to "question gov source". not happy 06:26:26 Amy Brunvand: On the bias question, I respond to such criticism in information literacy classes by saying, yes, it is, but laws and regulations are going to be based on this information which means it has a real-life effect regardless. 06:27:42 Jen Kirk, Utah State University: Thanks for the presentation, and for the work you do for FDLP libraries year round! 06:27:56 Aimée Quinn: I always point out that government employees are like you and me and there is bias. But for the most part they are doing the best work they can. 06:27:56 susanne: Thank you! 06:27:58 sdorsey: Thank you! 06:27:59 mbarker: Thank you! 06:27:59 Connie Williams: Thank you This has sparked some ideas!! 06:28:02 Jennifer Jones: Thank you, Lara and Jaime! Great presentation! 06:28:04 Perveen Rustomfram: Thank you for the great ideas! 06:28:07 Emily Wiechmann: Thank you! 06:28:07 Aimée Quinn: Thanks again! 06:28:09 Jen Kirk, Utah State University: Keeping up with the outreach theme, our next presentation will focus on traveling exhibits. There's a pre-recorded presentation to check out: https://ala-events.zoom.us/rec/play/v8Isf-76pjM3SdGUtASDAvcsW9W1e_qs2ncbqPcPxRmwVHcKMFehYuYWY-A4ASnt0WpPfMe4pna-hsPM?startTime=1595013361000&_x_zm_rtaid=pxrAk5tgSoyUsuuCUN4gVA.1596655484548.b99432fcd1597323e663be5787ec3365&_x_zm_rhtaid=923 (it is just shorter than the break time) 06:28:11 Jennifer boettcher: GovInfo is still my favorite source