I am also the subject librarian for computer science and mathematics, informed in this work by my study of logic and computer science. Additionally, I am the librarian for audiology and speech-language-hearing sciences, drawn to these subjects because of my personal experience with hearing loss. Finally, I am the librarian for the Public Scholarship MALS concentration and the Advanced Certificate in Public Scholarship, as well as the selector of books about disability and accessibility.
My own research focus is scholarly communication, very broadly construed: recent projects look at concerns surrounding open access dissertations, attitudes about practice-based library literature, and the professional experiences of hard of hearing librarians. I am committed to advancing nonprofit community-led open access initiatives; I recently wrapped up three years as chair of the editorial board of the Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication and am co-founder and managing editor of the Journal of Graduate Librarianship.
Before coming to the Graduate Center in 2013, I worked for eight years as a reference and instruction librarian at Brooklyn College. Previously, I worked as a librarian at the Dance Notation Bureau and at the Boston Architectural Center (now Boston Architectural College). My education includes a B.A. in computer science from Amherst College, an M.S. in library and information science from Simmons University, and an M.Sc. in logic from the Universiteit van Amsterdam’s Institute for Logic, Language, and Computation, where I studied on a Netherland-America Foundation Fulbright Grant.


