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NASIG 2026
Welcome to the NASIG 2026 Conference. The conference will take place at University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Memorial. Union on June 2-4, 2026. Check out the Venue Map link below to locate conference spaces. The Registration Desk is on the 2nd floor by the Annex Room. Wifi logon instructions are available here. Note: If you are registered with eduroam at your home institution you can connect to wifi using eduroam.

Please visit the NASIG website for conference details.




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Wednesday, June 3
 

6:30am CDT

NASIG Ramble
Wednesday June 3, 2026 6:30am - 7:30am CDT
Join NASIG colleagues for a walk through Capitol Square down to the shore of Lake Monona and to the Frank Lloyd Wright designed Monona Terrace building before walking along the lakefront Capital City Trail to Law Park. This is an out and back route that is approximately 3 miles. Ramblers can choose to complete the full route or head back after completing a partial route.

All ages and abilities are welcome but please fill out a waiver and return it to the Registration Desk by the end of conference day June 2nd.You can download a waiver from Sched (link below) or pick one up at the Registration Desk.

 Meet your fellow ramblers outside the entrance of the Graduate Hotel (601 Langdon Street) at 6.30am

Detailed route available here.

Wednesday June 3, 2026 6:30am - 7:30am CDT
The Graduate Hotel

8:30am CDT

Quiet Room
Wednesday June 3, 2026 8:30am - 5:30pm CDT
Enjoy this room as a place to pray, meditate, read, relax, or just about anything you need for some self-care.
Please refrain from phone calls and conversation, but you can expect some low-level activity resulting in minimal noise.
Wednesday June 3, 2026 8:30am - 5:30pm CDT
Capitol View Room

8:30am CDT

Registration + Information Desk
Wednesday June 3, 2026 8:30am - 5:30pm CDT

Wednesday June 3, 2026 8:30am - 5:30pm CDT

9:00am CDT

From Assessment to Action: Using Gap Analysis to Strengthen Library Collections
Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CDT
This session explores a systematic gap analysis of library resources supporting 15 academic programs across six colleges. By reviewing over 150 databases and hundreds of core journals, we identified strengths and deficiencies to inform a strategic, data-driven collection development plan.
Speakers
Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CDT
Old Madison

9:00am CDT

When the Past No Longer Serves You: Updating ER Workflows and Procedures
Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CDT
A discussion of the University of North Texas Libraries review of various workflows and processes related to Electronic Resources and changes implemented to make them more efficient.
Speakers
avatar for Todd Enoch

Todd Enoch

Head of Collection Development, University of North Texas
Todd Enoch obtained his MLS in 2005 from the University of North Texas while working in their library as a staff member, first in Cataloging and later in Serials. In February 2006, Todd was hired as a librarian at UNT in the Serials unit, remaining in the unit as its head until 2024... Read More →
LC

Lisa Cuevas

Subscription & Resource Management Librarian, University of North Texas
TB

Tracy Brewster

University of North Texas

Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CDT
Beefeaters

9:00am CDT

Who Benefits? Assessing the Author Experience and Impact of Open Access Publishing Agreements
Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CDT
Illinois State University’s Milner Library has twelve transformative agreements, and as of December 2025 has supported the publication of 200 open access articles, benefiting 426 authors including ISU faculty and students, as well as collaborators from outside institutions. This session will report on findings from surveys and interviews conducted with ISU authors who have made use of these agreements as the corresponding author. We will provide insight into authors’ awareness of library OA agreements, authors’ experience navigating various publishers’ OA platforms and processes, how OA agreements impact author venue selection, author order, and selection of corresponding authors, and whether authors perceive OA agreements to be an endorsement of a publisher. We will also explore how our agreements benefit researchers at other institutions, since 120 co-authors to date have been from outside the university and inter-institutional research groups may select venues and designate the corresponding author to make use of one institution’s agreements. Based on these findings, we will share implications for collection strategy, author communication, and agreement management, tying into the NASIG Core Competencies for Scholarly Communication Librarians. While this session will be most applicable to librarians working in scholarly communication and/or collection strategy, all librarians who interact with institutional authors or are interested in transformative agreements may find these insights useful.
Speakers
avatar for Lindsey Skaggs

Lindsey Skaggs

Scholarly Communication Librarian, Illinois State University
avatar for Rachel Scott

Rachel Scott

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CDT
Multicultural Greek Council Room

9:00am CDT

Posters available for viewing
Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:00am - 5:00pm CDT

Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:00am - 5:00pm CDT
Tripp Commons

9:00am CDT

Vendor Expo
Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:00am - 5:00pm CDT

Wednesday June 3, 2026 9:00am - 5:00pm CDT
Tripp Commons

10:00am CDT

Morning Break
Wednesday June 3, 2026 10:00am - 10:30am CDT

Wednesday June 3, 2026 10:00am - 10:30am CDT

10:30am CDT

Collaborative Approaches to Streamlining Print & E-Resource Cancellation and Conversion Workflows
Wednesday June 3, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Developing a new workflow for print and electronic serial cancellations and conversions using a cross-unit collaborative approach.
Speakers
MM

Missy Motl

Electronic Resources Management Librarian, University of Wisconsin-Madison
avatar for Marissa Tartaglia

Marissa Tartaglia

Serials Acquisitions Manager, University of Wisconsin-Madison Libraries
Wednesday June 3, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Old Madison

10:30am CDT

Understanding Wikipedia's Epistemology
Wednesday June 3, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
This presentation will examine the ins and outs of how English Wikipedia evaluates and uses sources, academic and otherwise, from the theoretical principles enshrined in its policies and guidelines, to the collaborative, often-messy process of applying these principles to concrete examples of sources and article content. In addition to presenting an introduction to these behind-the-scenes aspects of Wikipedia, implications for library services, scholarly publications, and emerging technologies will be discussed.
Speakers
JY

Jonathan Yehuda Engel

Distinctive Collections Cataloger, University of Pittsburgh
Wednesday June 3, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Beefeaters

10:30am CDT

You, Me, and Productivity / Keep it 100 at the SEA: Navigating the Choppy Waters of Departmental Change
Wednesday June 3, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Changes and innovations in libraries are almost ubiquitous. What happens when you have a say in specific changes and innovations? In the presentation “You, Me, and Productivity,” Jackie Blanton-Watkins of Kennesaw State University will discuss leveling up into an Assistant Director position and rethinking productivity to make sure the team is doing work with impact, both across the library and across campus. Blanton-Watkins recognizes that she is an individual contributor, a project manager, and team leader, and figuring out how to manage all this work dropped her down a rabbithole about Personal Knowledge Management (PKM). PKM has helped cut through the noise, prioritize and manage the information you keep to release the cognitive load and be truly productive and accomplish awesome things.

In “Keep it 100 at the SEA: Navigating the Choppy Waters of Departmental Change,” Michelle Colquitt of Clemson University will outline the rebuilding efforts for both the Metadata Services and Acquisitions Departments after a period of extreme attrition due to retirements and other personnel departures. Colquitt will relate changes and rebuilding of both departments through a critical lens assessing change management in accordance with both the Core Competencies for Electronic Resources Librarians and Print Serials Management, specifically in the domains of Effective Communication and Supervision and Management. Topics discussed in this portion of the session will include: change management, succession planning, process and procedure documentation, peer support and mentoring, and team building exercises.
Speakers
avatar for Michelle Colquitt

Michelle Colquitt

Continuing Resources & Government Information Management Librarian, Clemson University Libraries
Greetings! My name is Michelle Colquitt and I am the Continuing Resources and Government Information Management Librarian at Clemson University. I'm an introverted people person who loves to make connections and chat about library technical services. I'm looking forward to meeting... Read More →
avatar for Jackie Blanton-Watkins

Jackie Blanton-Watkins

Assistant Director of Resource Strategy and Collection Analytics Librarian, Kennesaw State University
I have worked in libraries for over 15 years. I have worked at Kennesaw State University (in the metro Atlanta area) since 2018 and have worn many hats in both traditional technical services and collection development roles with e-resource management. I have been in my current role... Read More →
Wednesday June 3, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Multicultural Greek Council Room

11:45am CDT

Vendor Lightning Talks
Wednesday June 3, 2026 11:45am - 1:00pm CDT
Wednesday June 3, 2026 11:45am - 1:00pm CDT
TBA

1:00pm CDT

Lunch (on your own)
Wednesday June 3, 2026 1:00pm - 2:15pm CDT

Wednesday June 3, 2026 1:00pm - 2:15pm CDT

2:15pm CDT

Alices Adventures in NASIGland: A Musical Celebration of Forty Years of NASIG
Wednesday June 3, 2026 2:15pm - 3:15pm CDT

Speakers
avatar for Nicole Ameduri

Nicole Ameduri

Head of Account Development, North America, Springer Nature

avatar for John Felts

John Felts

Head of Information Technology and Collections, Coastal Carolina University
John is currently the Head of Information Technology and Collections at Coastal Carolina University. He has worked in academic library technology for over 30 years and is a former patent holder and co-founder of Journal Finder, the first OpenURL Resolver and knowledge base to go into... Read More →
avatar for Heather Staines

Heather Staines

Senior Consultant, Delta Think
I'm a consultant for scholarly publishers and vendors, and I am also Director of Community Engagement for the Delta Think Open Access Data & Analytics Tool. In my spare time I write musicals about metadata!
Wednesday June 3, 2026 2:15pm - 3:15pm CDT
Great Hall

2:15pm CDT

Integrating student workers into e-resources projects: Where, when, and how
Wednesday June 3, 2026 2:15pm - 3:15pm CDT
Student workers are an invaluable resource for libraries in all areas of service. They often provide support for circulation, public, and reference services, and given the opportunity, they can also provide essential support for technical services. The University of San Diego Copley Library has a rich history of employing undergraduate student workers as part of the library’s Federal Work/Study (FWS) Program. The Technical Services department, in particular, employs the second largest group of student workers at Copley Library. Technical Services student workers were originally hired to support the library’s print collection by processing and shelving print materials, assisting with authority control, repairing books, and other light tasks as needed. However, as print acquisitions declined, so did the number of required student tasks and student worker positions in Technical Services. Today, Copley Library’s Technical Services employs four student workers, and our department struggles with assigning regular and appropriate tasks for the students. Following several discussions about continuing to hire FWS students in Technical Services, our department decided to take a new approach to our student workers. Over the course of a year, we began to actively integrate our student workers into e-resources projects by creating and adapting assignments based on their skills and interests. Our student workers have helped lay the groundwork for a number of project areas in Technical Services, including accessibility, AI awareness, instruction outreach, and ILS migration clean-up. This presentation will discuss managing student workers in Technical Services and adapting student work for e-resource workflows and highlight several projects that benefited from student involvement, including:

an accessibility audit of library databases,
identification of AI features in library databases,
student feedback on catalog tutorials,
post-Alma ILS migration clean-up, and
new social media outreach efforts.
Speakers
avatar for Amy Pham

Amy Pham

Senior Electronic and Open Content Librarian, University of San Diego
Wednesday June 3, 2026 2:15pm - 3:15pm CDT
Old Madison

2:15pm CDT

Teaching Old Data New Tricks: Using AI to Solve Legacy Metadata Problems in Serials and Government Documents
Wednesday June 3, 2026 2:15pm - 3:15pm CDT
Libraries have long grappled with the complexities of legacy metadata, particularly in serials and government documents, where inconsistent practices, evolving cataloging standards, and repeated system migrations create persistent data quality problems. Tasks once viewed as too time-consuming or difficult to tackle at scale are becoming increasingly manageable with the rise of practical, library-focused applications of artificial intelligence. This session presents two case studies from the University of Toronto Libraries that demonstrate how AI can transform long-standing metadata challenges into transparent, replicable, and sustainable workflows. The first case study highlights an initiative that uses ChatGPT and Alma Cloud Apps to generate and standardize serials item-level metadata. Through AI-driven methods, the project automates the retrospective itemization of holdings, creating more accurate and consistent records. It also demonstrates how generative AI can support both the creation of item-level metadata and the regeneration of serial summary holdings. The second case study illustrates how AI-generated Python scripts can remediate government document metadata at scale by clustering similar bibliographic records and programmatically selecting higher-quality OCLC replacements to enhance discovery and overall record quality. Together, these projects show how generative AI, guided by librarian oversight and supported by robust APIs, can amplify human expertise and make long-standing legacy data challenges newly solvable.
Speakers
avatar for Marlene van Ballegooie

Marlene van Ballegooie

Metadata Technologies Manager, University of Toronto
Marlene van Ballegooie is the Metadata Technologies Manager at the University of Toronto Libraries. She received her MISt degree from the Faculty of Information Studies, University of Toronto. At the University of Toronto Libraries, Marlene is responsible for the Metadata Technologies... Read More →
avatar for Juliya Borie

Juliya Borie

Cataloguing Librarian, University of Toronto
Juliya Borie is a Metadata Librarian at the University of Toronto Libraries. She is responsible for managing resources description for serials and monographic materials in a variety of languages and formats. Her research interests include resource discovery, linked data and multilingual... Read More →
avatar for Natalia Mykhaylychenko

Natalia Mykhaylychenko

Metadata Creation Specialist, University of Toronto
Natalia Mykhaylychenko is a Metadata Creation Specialist at the University of Toronto Libraries. She received her Master of Information degree from the Faculty of Information, University of Toronto. In her role, Natalia is responsible for cataloguing serials and monographs in print... Read More →
Wednesday June 3, 2026 2:15pm - 3:15pm CDT
Multicultural Greek Council Room

3:15pm CDT

Great Ideas Showcase: poster presenters available
Wednesday June 3, 2026 3:15pm - 4:30pm CDT

Wednesday June 3, 2026 3:15pm - 4:30pm CDT
Tripp Commons

3:15pm CDT

Ice Cream Social
Wednesday June 3, 2026 3:15pm - 4:30pm CDT
Talk with vendors and poster presenters while you enjoy some Babcock ice cream, produced by UW-Madison's College of Agricultural and Life Sciences!
Wednesday June 3, 2026 3:15pm - 4:30pm CDT
TBA

4:30pm CDT

Snapshot Sessions
Wednesday June 3, 2026 4:30pm - 5:30pm CDT

Wednesday June 3, 2026 4:30pm - 5:30pm CDT
TBA

6:30pm CDT

Dine-arounds
Wednesday June 3, 2026 6:30pm - 8:30pm CDT
Dine-arounds are an opportunity to enjoy good food and the company of NASIG colleagues. Please sign up at the registration desk by 1pm on June 3rd if you would like to participate. Diners pay for their own meals. Dine-arounds will be limited to groups of 10 and attendees will meet at the restaurant at 6.30pm. Pleas ask for the NASIG table when you get to the restaurant.

The Conference Planning Committee (CPC) is still finalizing the list of Dine-around restaurants from the list below and will offer between 4 and the full list as options. All restaurants are within 1 mile of the Memorial Union.


Bistro 525 - International Menu
525 W Johnson St, Madison, WI 53703
11 min walk/ 0.5 miles from Memorial Union

Bassett Street Brunch Club - Vintage diner/comfort food. Open all day, not just brunch!
444 W Johnson St, Madison, WI 53703
11 min walk/0.5 miles from Memorial Union

Cento - Italian Cuisine
122 W Mifflin St, Madison, WI 53703
16 min walk/ 0.7 miles from Memorial Union

Izakaya Kuroyama - Japanese Cuisine
419 State Street, Madison. WI 53703
9 min walk/ 0.4 miles from Memorial Union

Lucille - Pan-Latin Cuisine and Wood-Fired Pizza
101 King St. Madison, WI  53703
23 min walk/ 1 mile from Memorial Union

The Statehouse - American Cuisine
1001 Wisconsin Place, Madison, Wisconsin, 53703
15 min walk/ 0.6 miles from Memorial Union





Wednesday June 3, 2026 6:30pm - 8:30pm CDT

8:00pm CDT

Late Night Social
Wednesday June 3, 2026 8:00pm - 10:00pm CDT
Gather with your fellow NASIG attendees and friends for an evening of board and card games. Bring your favorite games and if you’re a crafter, feel free to bring your current project!
The Social will be held on the Terrace or in Der Rathskeller if it is raining.
Wednesday June 3, 2026 8:00pm - 10:00pm CDT
 
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