Magical Metamorphosis:
Evolution of the AUBER Editor
Glitz, glamour, and magic
Oh, did you think I was talking
about Vegas? Well, yes, Vegas was nice, too, but I was actually
referring to the wonderful editors' sessions at the 2002 AUBER
fall conference hosted by UNLV. Don Bagwell and Jason Blackburn
of Digital Impact Design brought us up to date on current
design trends, showed us how to convert print to electronic
publications, and provided a hands-on work-shop at the UNLV
campus in the use of PageMaker, InDesign, PhotoShop, Illustrator,
and Acrobat.
And, did I mention the informative "From Desk to Delivery"
presentation by Nancy Cleveland of UN´V, the excellent
funding advice offered by Lee Grehan from the University of
Memphis in his "Writing Proposals" session, and
the tips from Carol Rogers' (Indiana University) session on
"Auto Updating Web Pages?" (By the way, be sure
to visit the excellent www.stats.indiana.edu Web site for
your state's county profiles, compliments of the Indiana business
Research Center.) When all of this is added to the kitty (gambling
pun intended), no one has an excuse NOT to add glitz, glamour,
and magic to their publications and online products! A huge
note of thanks is warranted to the UNLV hosts and the editors'
program co-chair, Dee Jones and Carol Griffen, along with
their entourage of presenters and chair-persons. We all went
home winners, with a wealth of information to share.
We began our sessions learning about what each of the individual
bureaus and centers were doing. We finished our sessions developing
a future direction, incorporating significant changes both
in how we view ourselves as an AUBER group and in the direction
we wish to travel. During our 2003 planning session, we discussed
our changing and more blended professional roles and the need
for sessions to attend to those changes. We discovered we
are no longer just "editors," but managers, librarians,
supervisors, public relations technicians, project managers,
and grant and funding experts as well. Our new names, "Research
Communicators," encompasses the diversity of our profession
and reaches out to other professional staff within our units.
Our proposed 2003 topic list (see below) addresses our diverse
cross-training needs.
Under the direction of 2003 AUBER program chairs Marshall
Vest and Stephen Smith, AUBER is planning to include a few
plenary research communicator and director sessions in New
Orleans. Research communication topic suggestions include:
current research topic trends, data presentation, increasing
survey response rates, Internet research, team project management
and production shortcut tips, performing a public relations
audit of your center or bureau, selling the bureau/selling
the product, and Web site showcase. Make plans now to join
us as we embark on our evolutionary journey in the bayous
of Louisiana in 2003!
Susan Floyd
University of Florida
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