Former Instructors and Collaborators
Rafael ARAÚJO
University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science (RSMAS), Miami, USA
Rafael J Araújo is a senior research associate of the Division of Marine Biology and Fisheries of the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science (RSMAS). He has a degree in marine biology from Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano in Bogotá, Colombia, and a graduate degree in marine affairs and policy from the University of Miami. His specialty is mangrove ecosystem ecology and management. He has carried out research projects in Florida, throughout the Caribbean, the Middle East, Central America, and China. Since 1997 he has served as assistant editor of the scientific journal Bulletin of Marine Science published by RSMAS. He frequently lectures on topics ranging from mangrove ecology to writing for scientific articles and publications on behalf of NGOs and other governmental agencies trying to expand the participation of researchers from developing nations in scientific and technical journals and publications. He is a member of the Council of Science Editors and this is his second training course for UNESCO.
Maria BELLO Maria Bello is a Marine Biologist and a Marine Librarian. She is currently the NOAA Southeast Fisheries Science Center Librarian in Miami. She holds a Masters degrees in Marine Biology, Marine Affairs and Policy, and Information Science. Her special interests include environmental issues in the Caribbean and South America. Her publications include fisheries studies focused on shrimp, as well as science data and document recovery publications. Maria has taught “Writing for Professional Publication” for the IODE OceanTeacher program, as well as other courses as part of the UNESCO Latin America science programs. She has also taught for the Instituto Latinoamericano de Ciencias Marinas y del Ambiente |
André CATTRIJSSE Dré Cattrijsse is head of the research facilities department of the Flanders Marine Institute. He is coordinating the operations of the coastal research vessel Zeeleeuw and the related scientific equipment and land based facilities of the institute. |
Charles EHLER Charles Ehler is the President of Ocean Visions. He works in Paris, France, primarily as a marine spatial planning consultant to UNESCO’s Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC). Before moving to Paris in 2005, he was a senior executive for the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and |
Elizabeth FISH Elizabeth (Lisa) Fish has worked in academic and research libraries for the past twenty-five years. She has a BA degree in speech communication from Minnesota State University, Moorhead and received her Master of Library Service degree from Rutgers University, New Jersey. Currently she is Librarian Professor and Director of the Rosenstiel School of Marine and |
Pamela FLETCHER Florida Sea Grant, Miami, Florida |
Francisco HERNANDEZ
|
Nancy E KRAFT Nancy E. Kraft is the Head of Preservation at the University of Iowa Libraries where she is responsible for directing the preservation and conservation of the library collections. Nancy Kraft is a strong advocate for the preservation and proper management of Iowas cultural treasures. She is a leader in the Iowa Conservation and Preservation Consortium and is currently co-directing a statewide disaster preparedness and response plan for Iowas library and museum collections through the Consortium. Kraft spearheaded several ambitious projects including the conversion of over 3.9 million pages of newspapers onto microfilm through a federally funded program and implementation of the Iowa Heritage Digital Collections which has established on-line access to special collections across Iowa. In 2006 she received the University of Iowa President Award for State Outreach and Public Engagement for her many interrelated contributions to the preservation and accessibility of historical sources in Iowa. She received the Midwest Archives Conference 2009 Presidents for her extraordinary work following the historic levels of flooding that struck Iowa in the summer of 2008. In June 13, 2008 all University of Iowa employees were officially asked not to report back to work until at least June 23, more than one week after the floods crest. Instead of staying at home, however, Ms Kraft spent that time assisting museums, libraries and archives in her home town of Cedar Rapids, both in person and by cell phone. She worked late into the night each night during that time, even though she was under no obligation to do so. She continued performing this service for other repositories not her employer at various times on nights and weekends for the balance of the summer and into early fall. Kraft, a past President of the Iowa Library Association, is also active in the American Library Association where she served as Chair of the Preservation and Reformatting Section of the Library Collections Technical Services Division, 2005-2006. Kraft holds a Masters in Library Science from the University of Iowa and an undergraduate degree in Russian from the University of South Dakota. She is currently an Adjunct Faculty member of the School for Information and Library Science, University of Iowa, where she teaches Conservation and Preservation of Collection Materials. |
Yassine LASSOUED |
Roger LONGHORN Senior SDI Expert, Compass Informatics Ltd (Dublin)Information Policy Advisor, Coastal & Marine Union - EUCCEditor, SDI Magazine / Editor, GSDI Association GSDI & IGS Monthly Newsletterral@alum.mit.edu / roger@sdimag.comRoger Longhorn holds BSc and MSc degrees from M.I.T. (Ocean Engineering and Shipping Management) and has been involved in the ICT industry since 1976. He developed marine information systems globally (1976 to 1986), then worked as an expert in information services for the European Commission until 1999, and has remained involved in several EC R&D programmes since then. Roger assisted in developing the European Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI) strategy (now called INSPIRE) since 1995 to the present. He authored a practical guide to spatial data legal issues (2002) and co-authored a book on value, pricing and consumption of geographic information (2008), plus chapters in books dealing with coastal/marine SDI (1999, 2003, 2005, 2009). He is vice-Chair Communications of the Global Spatial Data Infrastructure (GSDI) Association Outreach Committee and Information Policy Advisor to the Coastal and Marine Union - EUCC. At EUCC, Roger also leads the EUCC Information and Data Management Working Group, which is now participating in developing the data harmonisation and services interoperability specifications for several marine data themes covered by the EU SDI INSPIRE Directive. Roger also edits SDI Magazine (www.sdimag.com) and the GSDI Association GSDI & IGS Monthly Newsletter (www.gsdi.org). Roger lectures for the IOC IODE Ocean Teacher Academy mainly in the areas of information management, marine SDI and communications skills, as well as having developed the EU Funding Opportunities web site for IOC IODE.
|
Caitlin MOORE Caitlin Moore graduated from Albion College (Albion, Michigan) with a degree in Studio Art and Art History. She attended the University of Iowa Center for the Book (Iowa City, Iowa) and received a graduate degree in Book and Paper Conservation in 2008. Since then she has worked as a Collections Recovery Conservation Technician at the University of Iowa. She has held this position since the Midwest flooding of 2008. In 2009 she traveled to Arequipa, Peru with conservator Gary Frost to assist in the preservation of the library in the Recoleta Convent. In addition, she has responded to other local disasters including the flooding of the University of Iowa Art Library, and the flooding of the Colfax Historical Society in Colfax, Iowa. She has co taught several disaster recovery workshops and tutorials as well as speaking to classes and organizations about her experience in flood recovery. Caitlin has recently accepted a position at the National Archives in St. Louis which will begin in June 2011. Ms. Moore participated as an Instructor in the OceanTeacher Course Disaster Planning and Recovery organized by Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO. |
Paul NIEUWENHUYSEN
Paul Nieuwenhuysen is a full-time member of the academic staff at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, since 1983, nowadays as professor. These days his functions include: member of the management board of the University Library, science and technology librarian, as well as teaching courses on online information retrieval and presentation. |
Linda PIKULA
Linda Pikula holds a Master’s degree in Information Science from Simmons College, Boston, Massachusetts. She obtained a Master’s degree in Business Administration, and studied law at Western New England College in Massachusetts. She is a founding member of two earth sciences professional societies: the Atmospheric Science Libraries International and the Southern Aquatic Information Libraries, now part of the International Association of Marine and Aquatic Information. |
Bob KEELEY Bob Keeley has more than 30 years experience in ocean data management working for the Canadian Oceanographic Data Centre, the Marine Environmental Data Service. There, he chaired a national committee responsible for coordinating ocean data management activities for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. He has been chair of the Global Temperature and Salinity Profile Project, a co-chair of the Argo Data Management Team, and of the Global Ocean Surface Underway Data project. For 10 years he was a member of the Ocean Observation Panel on Climate. He chaired the JCOMM Data Management Programme Area for 4 years and is currently an External Advisor to the SeaDataNet-2 European Union project. He has authored a number of papers including contributing to a number of the IODE Manuals and Guides. |
Lisa RAYMOND Lisa Raymond is the Associate Library Director at the MBLWHOI Library. She is responsible for administration of the WHOI side of the MBLWHOI Library and manages staff and daily operations for the Data Library and Archives (DLA) at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI). The DLA houses an extensive collection of material ranging from early paper collections to current digital formats from WHOI research vessels and underwater vehicles. Lisa’s research activities focus on data publication and curation, accessibility, and long term preservation of legacy data. Lisa has been associated with the Library for over 20 years. |
Prof. Dr. Reiner SCHLITZER Reiner Schlitzer obtained a Diploma in Physics and a PhD in Environmental Physics at the University of Heidelberg. After a post-doctoral position at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1986 to 1987 he became Assistant Professor at the University of Bremen. He habilitated in 1993 at the University of Bremen and then took a position as senior scientist at the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in Bremerhaven. In 2003 he became Professor for Environmental Physics at the University Bremen. |
Anthony SMITH Anthony D. Smith is a Senior Program Officer for the National Leadership Grant program, at the Institute of Museum and Library Services. He previously served as the Director of Digital Initiatives and Services at the University of Miami and the Coordinator for the University of Tennessee's Digital Library Center. Mr. Smith has published articles on web usability, institutional repositories and has also written on the technology infrastructure in Uganda to support teaching and learning. Other activities include a very dynamic role with the School of Information Science to help educate graduate students on the many contemporary issues in building digital libraries. Mr. Smith has been actively involved in international technology instruction. in 2004, he traveled to Uganda to assist Makerere University in the development of digitization services and digital collections. Since 2009, Mr. Smith has served as a lecturer for the OceanTeacher Academy, teaching courses in digital asset management and digital preservation. Mr. Smith holds an A.S. in biochemistry, a B.A. in anthropology, and an M.S. in information science. |
Murray BROWN
(Retired)
Dr. Brown was a senior program manager with the U.S. Minerals Management service, having managed over thirty U.S. government offshore studies projects between 1978-1999, mainly involving the Gulf of Mexico. He received a B.Sc. in Chemistry from Duke University in 1969, and a Licentiate Scientiarum (Ph.D.) in Marine Chemistry from the University of Copenhagen in 1975. From 1993 to 2010 Dr. Brown was a frequent participant in IOC/IODE marine data training programs on several continents. During that time he trained hundreds of marine scientists from dozens of countries. He was the editor of marine data management materials in www.OceanTeacher.org from 2001 to 2010. He currently works out of his home, near Daytona Beach, Florida, where he edits the training resource www.MarineDataLiteracy.org