|     THE STATE 
      EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY 
      OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 | 
 
| TO: | The Honorable the Members of the Board of Regents | 
| FROM: | Carole F. Huxley | 
| COMMITTEE: | Cultural Education | 
| TITLE OF 
      ITEM: | OCE 2003 Report on Actions to Increase Staff and Programmatic Diversity | 
| DATE OF 
      SUBMISSION: | May 28, 2004 | 
| PROPOSED 
      HANDLING: | Information | 
| RATIONALE FOR 
      ITEM: | Better Reflection of, and Response to, New York’s Demographics | 
| STRATEGIC 
      GOAL: | 4 | 
| AUTHORIZATION(S): |   | 
 
SUMMARY:
 
While it is a slow and difficult process to achieve a workforce that reflects New York’s remarkably rich diversity, we have been working in a number of other ways to respond to the needs of our many different populations. The attached report includes actions to that end initiated in the last year within the State Museum, the State Library and the State Archives, as well as in programs across the state supported through discretionary grants.
 
The document is somewhat lengthy, but I encourage you to browse it. It represents a USNY approach with many partners – from the military to social service organizations to higher education institutions – to ensure improved services to those who have been less well served in the past. Recognizing that there is a very long way to go to eliminate the gap in opportunity and resources for learning, staff has exhibited both initiative and creativity in finding ways to narrow it.
 
We would welcome your comments and suggestions on how to improve our work.
 
 
Attachment
 
 
Report 
on Actions to Increase Staff and Program Diversity in the Office of Cultural 
Education
 
The Office of Cultural Education 
remains committed to increasing diversity among its programs and staff.  Because the hiring freeze decreases the 
opportunities for making our staff more representative of New York’s population, 
we have had little chance to hire people of color in the past year.  However, we have been able to promote or 
hire a limited number of support staff and two librarian trainees via the Civil 
Service Workers with Disabilities Program.  
We continue to recruit a diverse group of volunteers and interns to the 
greatest extent possible.
 
Through a variety of programs and 
activities, OCE program areas have continued to highlight the diverse 
communities of New York State and to improve services to all New Yorkers.  Below is a report on the major actions 
taken in 2003 to improve services to the diverse communities in New 
York.
 
 
NY STATE 
MUSEUM
Major 
Activities
 
The State Museum has continued 
its practice of recruiting retired individuals over the age of 55 and 
individuals with physical and mental disabilities as volunteers to the 
Museum.  These volunteers assist in 
all aspects of Museum operations, including research and collections, education, 
visitor services, special events and administrative assistance.  
In 2003, 48 
individuals over the age of 55 volunteered their services to the Museum 
providing 5,439 hours of service.  
In addition, 45 individuals with disabilities volunteered approximately 
450 hours, accomplishing tasks 
that were significant to the operation of the Museum.
 
The New York State Museum 
Volunteer Office continues to strengthen ties with the Retired Senior Volunteer 
Program of the Capital District to offer their patrons additional volunteer 
opportunities in the downtown area.  
Over the past year, we have also continued strengthening our 
relationships with the Albany and Schenectady ARCs (Albany Rehabilitation 
Centers) and the Community Living 
Partnerships program.
 
The State Museum has designed 
and initiated a program to provide support to graduate students at the 
University at Albany in the areas of Anthropology, Biology, Earth and 
Atmospheric Sciences, and History.  
Four fellows were funded in the 2003-04 academic year, three female and 
one Hispanic male.  One of the 
fellow’s dissertation research focuses on the Rapp Road African-American 
community in western Albany; a second focuses on osteological analysis of the 
Albany Almshouse Cemetery, which contained the remains of individuals in poverty 
from nineteenth and early 20th-century Albany.
 
Late in 2003, representatives 
from the National Museum of the United States Army (NMUSA) approached the 
Museum.  NMUSA is preparing to open 
a major facility in Arlington Virginia, in 2009.  In preparation for the opening, it 
became clear that there was a significant lack of minority representation among 
military museum professionals.  They 
initiated a program in cooperation with Historically Black Colleges and 
Universities, Universities of Interest to Hispanic Students and Native American 
Colleges to encourage their undergraduate students to consider careers in 
museums.  The intent is to introduce 
students to careers in museums and to support their development in the 
profession.  The first group of 
students is expected in summer 2004.
 
 
The Museum continues 
documentation of its inventory of Native American human remains and funerary 
objects as required by Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act 
(NAGPRA).  The inventory includes 
information on Native American human remains and funerary objects from 
approximately 120 different localities in New York and other states.  Notices have been published in the 
Federal Register, and consultations have begun to allow the repatriation of 
culturally affiliated human remains.
 
          
Research and Collections, in association with the Museum Education 
program held its third Earth Science Teachers Institute in July 2003.  The Institute is designed to offer 
teachers an opportunity to learn more about the research conducted at the Museum 
and how it can assist them in their classrooms.  The Earth Sciences Institute reserved 
five spaces out of twenty-five for teachers working in economically 
disadvantaged schools and underserved communities, or in schools with 
historically low test scores.  The 
Earth Sciences Institute will be repeated this summer.  An additional Institute, focused on the 
Iroquois of New York, was held during the fall of 2003.  This Institute was organized around the 
theme of the longhouse, affording 12 educators the opportunity to learn about 
the history, structure, symbolism, and use of Iroquoian longhouses from 
scientific and Iroquoian viewpoints
 
The 
Colonial Albany Social History Project is a model community history program that 
was formed in 1981 to understand pre-industrial community life by studying the 
contributions of the diverse individuals who lived in the city of Albany during 
its formative years.  This 
initiative is ongoing, and the goal is to develop a biography for each person 
who lived in the pre-industrial city.  
Special efforts are being undertaken to look for Afro Albanians in the 
historical record, and new information on early Albany's African ancestry 
community continues to evolve.  More 
information can be found by visiting the following link: http://www.nysm.nysed.gov/albany/afroalbanians.html
 
The New York State Museum, 
with the assistance of its Office for Community Relations, endeavors to 
encourage under-represented populations to use the services and programs of the 
New York State Museum.  Some 
programs continue to be part of the Museum’s standard offering in a calendar 
year.  Such programs include:  the Governor’s annual Kick-Off 
Celebration for African American History Month; the Capital Region Kwanzaa 
Celebration; and, the Hispanic Heritage Celebration.  As part of our annual Hispanic Heritage 
program, a special display was set up to showcase the work of Peruvian 
artists.
 
In collaboration with HBO and 
the Library of Congress, the Museum hosted the regional premiere of the HBO 
special, Unchained Memories:  Readings From The Slave 
Narratives.  In February 2003, an exhibition on the 
life of Paul Robeson brought a number of community groups into the Museum.  The groups included the local graduate 
chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha, Fraternity Incorporated.  The men of America’s oldest Black male 
fraternity presented a program on the life of Paul Robeson.  The women of the Albany District Links 
and Alpha Kappa Alpha, Sorority Incorporated served as docents for the 
exhibition.  Several church 
organizations felt comfortable enough to ask to use the exhibition as a teaching 
tool and backdrop for their own programs.
 
In the spring of 2003 the 
Museum initiated an audit of the Museum’s accessibility level for persons with 
disabilities and others.  The audit 
covered gallery and other public places. 
 
In 2003, after several years 
of discussion and negotiation the Museum began collecting material associated 
with late 20th century African American culture in New York.  The collection will be formally 
presented to the Museum as part of an initiative between the New York State 
Museum and the GirlFriend, Incorporated in late May 2004.  The material includes donations from the 
family of James Weldon and John Rosemond Johnson.
 
In the late fall of 2003, the 
New York State Museum entered into an informal agreement with OASIS (Older Adult 
Services and Information Systems) at SUNY Albany.  The Museum will produce a series of 
programs specifically designed for OASIS participants on a variety of areas of 
cultural interest.  The first 
scheduled program is an early morning breakfast and tour of the Barbizon School 
art exhibition from The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
 
The Museum continues its 
ongoing relationship with the Thomas O’Brien Academy for Science and Technology 
(TOAST) Magnet School, providing educational support and programming when 
needed, and with Albany High School providing space for a class in 
communications and program production.  
Albany High School students present a program at the end of the school 
year for students in the surrounding public schools using Museum 
facilities.
 
The Museum’s award winning, 
after-school program is now in its seventeenth year.  The Museum Club provides a safe and 
educational alternative for children in our local community during those 
dangerous after-class hours of 3 and 5 p.m.  Continued also is the Discovery Squad, a 
work and study program for local teens.
 
 
 
Even 
in times when hiring is less restricted, the Archives has faced difficulties 
attracting 
diverse qualified candidates with a strong archives and records management 
knowledge base.  In addition, there 
is a generally acknowledged absence of diversity in the archives and records 
management profession overall.  To 
address these issues, we are exploring alternative methods of recruitment, 
including fostering partnerships with 
colleges and universities with degree programs required for Archives and Records 
Management Specialist (ARMS) exams and increasing the use of interns.  During 2003, we began discussions with 
Civil Service about revamping the entry-level ARMS 1& 2 exams and the ARMS 3 
exam to training and experience exams.  
In addition, the training and experience requirements for the ARMS 1 
& 2 exams will be modified. These changes are being made in order to attract 
a more diverse pool of qualified candidates to our 
positions.
 
The New York State Archives’ 
Documentary Heritage Program (DHP) is a statewide initiative working to ensure 
the equitable and comprehensive documentation and accessibility of all of New 
York’s extraordinarily rich history and culture.  Central to the project is an 
understanding that different organizations and groups -- governments, 
businesses, institutions, non-governmental organizations, community 
organizations, ethnic groups and families -- have different ways of thinking 
about and documenting their activities. 
 
In 2002, the State Archives 
received grant funding from the National Historical Publications and Records 
Commission (NHPRC) to provide additional funds for the Documentary Heritage 
Program through the 2005-2006 DHP Grant cycle.  One focus of the additional funding is 
on under-documented groups in New York.
 
For 
2003-2004, 10 of the 14 Documentary Heritage Program funded grants focused on 
projects documenting and making accessible the historical records of 
under-documented populations.  
Following is a summary of those projects:
 
1) A Gathering of the Tribes, 
Inc.
    This project is collecting 
and categorizing documents pertaining to the squatter homesteader struggle 
(1983-2003).  The squatter 
homesteaders are an under-documented community composed of many immigrants and 
low-income artists who "illegally" occupied vacant city-owned property to house 
them and their families and revitalize the community.  Their efforts resulted in the 
unprecedented municipal commencement of a process of title conversion and 
low-income, co-op ownership.
 
2) City University of New 
York
    The CUNY Dominican Studies 
Institute at the City College of New York is conducting a survey to locate and 
plan for the permanent preservation of historical records documenting the 
contributions of the New York Dominican Community. 
 
3) Community Consortium, 
Inc.
    The Community Consortium, a 
not-for-profit organization composed of people with psychiatric histories and 
their allies, is surveying records of over 100 state-funded 
consumer/survivor/ex-patient organizations (c/s/x); unincorporated self-help and 
advocacy groups; electronic records of c/s/x listservs and websites; and 
personal memoirs and papers of key activists. 
4) Hofstra 
University
    The University is surveying 
the records of Latino organizations and individuals on Long Island and educating 
record holders as to why their records need to be ordered and preserved and 
placed in historical repositories. 
 
5) Onondaga Historical 
Association
    The Association is 
identifying and preserving the historical records of the Latino community in 
Syracuse and Onondaga Counties.  The 
project will conduct a broad survey of 80 Latino organizations, individuals, 
arts groups, social groups, businesses, political organizations, movements and 
religious groups, identifying primary source material and archival documents 
that will help preserve the history and culture of the area's plural Latino 
communities.
 
6) Port Washington Public 
Library
    The library is conducting a 
survey to identify records documenting the lives and experiences of key 
Latino/Hispanic individuals and organizations on Long Island's North 
Shore.
 
7) Rensselaer County 
Historical Society
    This project is to arrange 
and describe the records of human services organizations in the Rensselaer 
County Historical Society.  The 
records date from the mid-19th century to the present and impart a 
wide spectrum of documentation of the populations in Troy that have needed 
assistance and those individuals and groups that provided that 
assistance.
 
8) Rochester Museum and 
Science Center
    The Museum, in partnership 
with the Rochester Latino community, is identifying holders of significant 
records that tell the story of the Rochester Latino Community and producing a 
Guide to these collections.
 
9) Roman Catholic Diocese of 
Brooklyn
    This project will conduct a 
survey of records held by diocesan-level Hispanic ministry offices in the Roman 
Catholic Dioceses of New York, Brooklyn, and Rockville Centre.  It will also gather parish and renewal 
group representatives to plan a further documentation survey of their 
records.
    
10) University of Rochester 
Rush Rhees Library
    The University’s Rush Rhees 
Library is surveying the records of the Asian/Pacific Islander/American 
community in the Great Rochester area (primarily Monroe County but also 
including Wayne, Orleans, Genesee, Ontario and Livingston Counties).
 
The Verizon Legacies Project, 
an outgrowth of four State Archives supported projects at Liberty High School in 
Manhattan, focuses on the literacy needs of recent immigrants, high school level 
to adults, who are learning to read and write English.  In 2003 the project website was 
completed and teacher and literacy service provider training programs and 
community receptions began.  The 
website includes histories of the Chinese and Latino communities in NYC, 
Yonkers, Albany, Syracuse and Buffalo. Each history is accompanied by a 
document-based question (DBQ).  The 
DBQs were developed to link closely with SED Learning Standards and 
Assessments.  The philosophy is that 
we learn more effectively when the educational materials we use are related to 
our own life experiences.  Buffalo, 
Syracuse, the Capital District and Yonkers are the sites for the training 
programs and receptions (to be completed by March, 2004). The Legacies Project 
can be viewed at: www.nysarchives.org/projects/legacies.
 
          
In June 2003, the State Archives’ Local Government Records Management 
Improvement Fund awarded grants for the Educational Use of Local Government 
Records to 22 local governments, which included many high-needs school districts 
and several teacher centers.  The 
projects involved the use of local government and other community historical 
records to support SED learning standards and preparation for state assessments. 
 Teachers are trained how to locate 
documents and develop document-based learning materials, and students and 
teachers work side-by-side on document-based community projects. 
·       
In NYC, three Community School 
Districts - 7, 8, and 10, working with a consultant, compiled copies of local 
government and other historical records (maps, photographs, census records, and 
more) to create digital collections of local historical resources for students 
and teachers in nine schools in the Bronx - PS 30, PS 154, IS 151, PS 46, PS 81, 
PS 306, PS 48, PS 72, and PS 119. 
 
          
Fifth grade students from PS 197 in Manhattan were the winners of the 
State Archives grades 4 & 5 Student Research Award.  The students discovered the subject of 
their winning project on a walking tour of their neighborhood in Harlem.  Using historical records, they compiled 
a written report about the architecture of Hamilton Grange – home of Alexander 
Hamilton - and wrote fictional accounts of what Hamilton’s reaction might be if 
he were to return to the Grange in the year 2003.  They used information from historical 
records to support their fictional accounts.  Some students imagined Hamilton coming 
to life from a ten-dollar bill and encountering the 21st century, 
filled with people who don’t talk the way he does, and who make fun of his 
clothes.  He is amazed that a 
bustling city has grown up around his farmhouse and that slavery no longer 
exists. 
 
Rediscovering 
New York History and Culture is another initiative of the State Archives aimed 
at improving the coverage and content of New York's documentary heritage and 
making it accessible to all.  The 
purpose is to ensure that all the diverse communities, peoples, and events in 
New York history are fully documented and that documentary evidence is easily 
accessible for research and learning.  
The Rediscovering New York website contains links to a vast array of 
information and resources linking finding aids, indexes, and guides; 
documentation projects; exhibits and digitized collections; publications; and/or 
additional resources related to people, groups, or cultures.  See 
http://iarchives.nysed.gov/RNYHC/r_subSearchServlet?cat=PGC.  Among the topics users can search are: 
African American, Asian American, European American, Gay and Lesbian, Jewish, 
Latinos, Multi-Ethnic, Native American, People with Disabilities, 
People/Groups/Culture and Women.  We 
continue to add links, as resources are made available on the World Wide Web. 
 
Another avenue for researchers 
to find information on diverse groups is through the Historic Document 
Inventory.  This online catalog 
contains more than 23,000 catalog 
records for archives and manuscripts collections housed locally at repositories 
throughout New York State (libraries, historical societies, and other 
organizations with established archives).  
This year, 19 records relating to African Americans, 65 concerning 
Children, 14 dealing with European Americans, 3 relating to Jews, 1 concerning 
Latinos, 17 dealing with lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender people, 18 concerning 
Native Americans, one addressing people with disabilities and 124 relating to 
women, were added to the catalog.
 
          
The Larry J. Hackman Research Resident program supports advanced work in 
New York State history, government or public policy, and encourages public 
dissemination of research products.  
Three of the projects selected for funding in 2003 focused on issues of 
diversity and culture:
 
1.  "Oneida Nation Archival Project 
Proposal" (Marlene Doxtator, Oneida Nation [Ontario, 
Canada])
 
Ms. Doxtator identified 
records that document the history of the Oneidas of New York prior to the early 
19th century, when almost all of them migrated to Wisconsin and 
Ontario.
 
2.  "Community Development Corporations in 
New York, 1968-2002" (Kimberley S. Johnson, Barnard 
College)
 
Ms. Johnson used Archives 
records to trace the contrasting histories of community development corporations 
in Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant, both predominantly Black 
communities.
3.  “The Hills: A Rural 
African-American Community in Westchester County, 1780s-1920s” (Edythe A. 
Quinn, Ph.D., Hartwick College)
 
Dr. Quinn has used records to 
identify members of an African-American community in upper Westchester County, 
which coalesced after the abolition of slavery in New York and endured until the 
early 20th century.
 
New York 
Archives, an 
award-winning quarterly magazine of the State Archives and the Archives 
Partnership Trust, draws its contents from information that exists in archival 
records that are found in virtually every community in New York State.  
Features in the 2003 issues included:
 
La Curación en el Norte (“The 
Cure” in the North)/ Amy Catania
Wealthy 
Latin Americans traveled to Saranac Lake to treat and cure their 
tuberculosis.
 
True 
Stories/Judith 
Wellman
Following 
the Freedom Trail in Oswego County.
 
“…to 
speak of myself to others…”/ 
Sheila Edmunds
The 
achievements of Fort Lewis Seliney, advocate for the deaf.
 
“Spanish 
Negroes” and Their Fight for Freedom/Richard 
Bond
Enslaved 
Spaniards in early New York used the courts to win back their 
freedom.
 
Regularly 
occurring departments in the magazine included the following 
articles:
Sagoyewatha 
(Red Jacket)/Christopher 
Densmore
The 
Fresh Air Fund/Deborah 
Schwabach
Unintended 
Casualties of John Brown’s Raid/Kathleen 
D. Roe
 
 
 
Major 
Activities
 
In 2003, diversity was added 
to the State Library's collections through resources such as databases available 
statewide through NOVEL, the New York 
Online Virtual Electronic Library. Among new databases added in 2003 is 
¡Informe! 
(Revistas en Español), 
a database specifically designed to meet 
the research needs of Spanish-speaking users.  It provides access to 117 full-text 
Spanish-language and bilingual magazine articles, reports and maps.  There are over 75,000 articles with 
daily updates.
 
Remote access improves 
services to customers with disabilities who may find it difficult to visit a 
Library.  All New Yorkers have 
convenient access to high-quality, current health-related information in 
NOVEL databases, such as 
Health 
Reference Center-Academic (HRCA), a source for both medical care 
professionals and consumers.  A 
single search gives users access to hundreds of journals, over 500 pamphlets and 
many reference services including the current PDR Index and The Medical and Health Information 
Directory.  It contains 
600, full-text titles.
 
The New York State Talking 
Book and Braille Library (TBBL) lends Braille and recorded books and magazines, 
and the equipment to use them, to residents of the 55 upstate counties of New 
York State who are unable to read standard printed materials because of a 
physical disability.  TBBL is the 
Regional Library for the upstate region in the nationwide program coordinated by 
the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, a 
division of the Library of Congress, in Washington DC.
 
The Division of Library 
Development administers a number of annual grant programs that provide 
significant services to a diverse population of library users through grants to 
libraries and library systems.  The 
New York State Library administers federally funded LSTA Special Services grants 
and the New York State funded Adult Literacy Library Services and the Parent and 
Child Library Services grant programs which enable public libraries and systems 
to reach out to diverse populations.  
Some specific 2003 grant projects that are aimed at a diverse audience 
and supported by funds administered by the State Library 
are:
1)      
Greater 
Poughkeepsie Public Library District (Dutchess) - Familias & La 
Biblioteca 
Low-income Spanish speaking immigrant 
families improve their literacy skills and become knowledgeable about library 
services.  Five Parent/Child 
Workshop sessions are facilitated by a bilingual resource professional.  Parents are able to ask parenting 
questions and receive information about local health services.  A Bonding with Baby program and a Hear 
and Say program model read-aloud techniques and tips on how to share books with 
babies and toddlers.
2)      
Hempstead 
Public Library (Nassau) - El Centro de Informacion Para los Padres y los Ninos: 
Information Center for Parents and Children
Spanish speaking families attend 
bilingual story times, presentations on community information resources and 
computer training workshops.  The 
Hempstead Library website is being translated into Spanish and the book 
collection is expanded with bilingual titles.  A family festival, "El dia de los ninos/ 
El dia de los libros," features a well-known, multi-lingual 
storyteller.
3)      
Ossining 
Public Library (Westchester) - Rimos y Ritmo
Latino families with children up to age 
four attend a five-week program of music and rhythm, with songs and nursery 
rhymes in both Spanish and English.  
The library partners with First Steps, a preschool program.  Parents are educated on the cognitive 
development of young children and the services the library 
provides.
4)      
Geneva Free 
Library (Ontario) - Wee Read Together
Outreach to four child development centers includes 
story-times, hands-on activities, special family programs and in-service 
trainings.  Story-times include 
bilingual activities and story-stretching arts and crafts. In-service training 
for daycare staff focuses on literacy material selections and read aloud 
techniques.  Activities and 
resources improve kindergarten readiness and increase staff knowledge of 
literacy and library services.
 
5)      
Hempstead Public Library 
(Nassau)  - Numbers/Talk 2
 
    
The Library acquires new interactive software packages for Pre-GED and 
GED preparation, expands the number of GED math classes, and provides online 
preparation for the Licensed Practical Nurse exam.  Conversation classes using "Ingles Sin 
Barreras" are offered days and evenings.  
The Hispanic Civic Association, the Hispanic Counseling Center and Town 
of Hempstead Department of Occupational Resources are cooperating agencies.
Oneida Public Library with the 
Sherrill, Canastota, Morrisville, Hamilton Public Libraries and the Earlville 
Free Library in Madison and Oneida Counties expand ESOL class offerings, adapt 
adult literacy services to meet the needs of adults with learning disabilities 
and provide tutors for adults who are participating in the Even Start program. 
Project partners are broadly based.  
Some partners are: Literacy Volunteers of America, Manpower 
International, Family Ties Coalition and Learning Disabilities Association of 
Central New York.
8)      
Port 
Washington Public Library (Nassau) - Literacy Enhancement for 
Developmentally Disabled Adults 
Developmentally disabled adults have 
the opportunity to improve literacy skills through participation in bi-weekly 
book discussion groups led by a trained teacher.  New books and other materials purchased 
for the target audience support the discussion groups.  This project partners with the Port 
Washington School District's Office of Educational and Community 
Services.
9)      
Queens 
Borough Public Library (Queens) - Adult Learner Program (ALP) Health 
Literacy
Queens Library 
collaborates with the Queens Health Network and the Mayor's Office of Health 
Insurance Access to develop a basic health literacy curriculum for students in 
the Library's ESOL classes.  A 
series of eight 12-week courses will be held in the Library's Adult Learning 
Centers.  Course goals include: 
improving English language skills, learning such health-related skills as how to 
talk with your own or your child's doctor, and increasing awareness of sources 
of health information at the library and on the Internet.
10)   Saratoga Springs Public 
Library (Saratoga) - ESOL Connect @ the 
Library 
The Library 
supports the transition of non-English speaking immigrants into the 
community.  In partnership with 
Literacy Volunteers of Saratoga, Inc., tutors are recruited and trained in 
one-on-one tutoring skills and in use of the library.  Library staff receives sensitivity 
training for work with the new population.  
An ESOL collection to support tutor and student needs is being developed 
and instruction offered in a computer-based English language 
program.
11)   Schenectady County Public 
Library (Schenectady) - Literacy 
Outreach and Opportunity Project-LOOP
Schenectady 
County Public Library, together with nine branch libraries and the Mohawk Valley 
Library System, works to meet the literacy needs of an increasing immigrant 
population.  The Library and 
Literacy Volunteers of America-Mohawk/Hudson expand their partnership with 
additional recruitment and training of ESOL tutors.  The Library's collection of ESOL 
materials is updated and a discussion series helps the target population learn 
about the library's resources.