Teaching with Primary Sources: Women's Suffrage & Libraries: Advisors

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Text reads: Teaching with Primary Sources: Women's Suffrage & Libraries. Black and white photo of suffragettes outside of the White House. ÂÜÀòÍøÊÓƵlogo. Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources Consortium Member logo. Original Image Credit: Harris & Ewing. Penn[sylvania] on the picket line, [January 24,] 1917. Reproduction. NWP Records, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress (327.00.00)

Advisors

Tatiana_Bryant_UCI_portraitTatiana Bryant

Tatiana Bryant is the Research Librarian for Digital Humanities, History, and African American Studies at UC Irvine. She holds a MPA from NYU and a MSLIS from Pratt Institute.

Cara Delatte

Cara Delatte is a reference archivist in the Manuscripts and Rare Books division at the New York Public Library. She has a Masters in Library Science with a certificate in Archival Studies and Records Management from Queens College and is currently finishing a Masters in History from the College of Staten Island. She is currently a co-chair of the Public Services Council and is co-curating the exhibition Her Vote, Her Voice: The Fight for Women’s Equality.

sw1Susan Shelton Witte

As a third-generation librarian, Susan has a lifelong enthusiasm for the library field. Through the University of North Carolina Greensboro Susan traveled abroad to study archives and libraries. She completed her Master’s of Library and Information Sciences from Louisiana State University. Susan created a Covid-19 public school archive for all Rockford Public Schools. She participated in reading studies, sits on the Michigan Association for Media in Education’s advocate committee and teaches students about the library field.

88345Regina E. Vitolo

Regina E. Vitolo is a faculty joint-use librarian for Lone Star College and Harris County Public Library, and she is an active member of the ÂÜÀòÍøÊÓƵ (ALA) and the Texas Library Association (TLA). Her interests include public history, poetry, and cat TNR and rescue. Regina’s writing on American women’s political history has been featured in Houston History Magazine, the 2017 National Women’s Conference, and the 2018 Houston History Alliance program guide. She received her M.S. in Library Science from the University of North Texas and her B.A. in History from the University of Houston where she focused on women’s political history, world cultures, and literature. Regina has post-graduate certifications in archival studies and primary source pedagogy. She currently serves on the board of Women in the Visual and Literary Arts.

*** Image Credit: Harris & Ewing. Penn[sylvania] on the picket line, [January 24,] 1917. Reproduction. NWP Records, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress (327.00.00)