Hi Everyone,
I need to develop a job description for a possible AtlanticOER Coordinator/Manager position (manage our PressbooksEDU network; provide Pressbooks and other OER-related training and support; administer our Development Grants and Peer Review
Honoraria programs; maintain and update our website; manage our social media presence; and advance our education and awareness program in the region), and I’d love to see examples of position descriptions for a role like this. If you are open to sharing the
position descriptions for similar roles in your organization, could you please send it to me as soon as possible? Thanks!
Sincerely,
Cynthia
Cynthia Holt, MLIS, CAE
Executive Director / Directrice générale
Council of Atlantic University Libraries / Conseil des bibliothèques universitaires de l’Atlantique (CAUL-CBUA)
120 Western Parkway, Suite 202, Bedford, NS B4B 0V2 |
W: caul-cbua.ca |
T: 902-830-6467 | E: execdir@caul-cbua.ca
CAUL-CBUA represents member libraries across the region, all of whom sit on the unceded and traditional territories of First Peoples. In Newfoundland and Labrador, our libraries
sit on the homelands of the Inuit of Nunatsiavut and NunatuKavut, the Innu of Nitassinan, the Beothuk and the Mi’kmaq peoples. In Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia, we find our friends and colleagues situated on the territory of the Mi’kmaq. In New Brunswick,
libraries are found on the land of the Wəlastəkwiyik, Mi’kmaq, and Passamaquoddy Peoples. We at CAUL-CBUA wish to express our sincerest gratitude to the First Peoples who share their ancestral homelands with us all.
CAUL-CBUA représente les bibliothèques membres de la région, qui sont toutes situées sur les territoires non cédés et traditionnels des Premiers Peuples. À Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador,
nos bibliothèques sont situées sur les terres des Inuits du Nunatsiavut et du NunatuKavut, des Innus de Nitassinan, des Béothuks et des Mi’kmaq. À l’Île-du-Prince-Édouard et en Nouvelle-Écosse, nous retrouvons nos amis et collègues situés sur le territoire
des Mi’kmaq. Au Nouveau-Brunswick, on trouve des bibliothèques sur les terres des peuples Wəlastəkwiyik, Mi’kmaq, et Passamaquoddy.
Nous
souhaitons exprimer notre plus sincère gratitude aux peuples autochtones qui partagent avec nous leurs terres ancestrales.