About us

Faculty and Staff Achievements: December 2025

At Carnegie Mellon University Libraries, we celebrate the many contributions of the faculty and staff who make the Libraries the destination for scholarly information, creative inquiry, and intellectual collaboration across disciplines, propelling the significance, reach, and impact of the university.

Related: Awards and Achievements, About us

Meet the 2025-2026 Sustainability Interns

The Sustainability Initiative is pleased to introduce the five interns on our team in 2025-2026. Aleena Siddiqui and Ameena George are returning, and we are welcoming Egshiglen Batjargal, Imama Zahoor, and Iris Hung to the team. Read on to learn more about their backgrounds and the work they'll be doing with the Sustainability Initiative. Follow their work on Instagram @sustainablecmu or visit cmu.edu/sustainability-initiative.

Related: Sustainability, About us

Meet the 2025-2026 Libraries Student Advisory Council

The 2025-2026 Libraries Student Advisory Council (LSAC) has started meeting! This year’s LSAC will focus on exploring and growing the map resources available to the CMU campus community. A team of undergraduate and graduate students will work with Arts and Humanities Librarian Lynn Kawaratani to learn about how the CMU Architecture Archives collects, conserves and promotes the use of architectural records that document the architects and architecture of Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, and the region.

Related: About us

Spotlight: Erin Swift

At the University Libraries, faculty and staff bring diverse backgrounds and interests to their roles, elevating the Libraries’ culture of interdisciplinary collaboration and lifelong learning and curiosity. We asked Outreach and Engagement Events Manager Erin Swift a few questions about her work, to find out more about the inspiration behind her contributions to the campus community.

Related: About us, Events and Exhibits

Cultivating AI-Literate Researchers

AI tools like Scopus AI and Scite can be useful when exploring and synthesizing existing research, and using algorithms to work with data can automate repetitive tasks and increase efficiency. Generative AI can aid in brainstorming, organizing, and editing. But research about AI literacy and its impact on education is an emerging area, and it’s rapidly evolving. When Libraries AI specialist and STEM Librarian Haoyong Lan offered his first interdisciplinary research course in summer 2025, this was the topic he wanted to give his students the chance to explore.

Related: About us, Learning Assistance, Research Assistance

Lights, Camera, Library!

This summer, the University Libraries took an all-hands-on-deck approach to showcase things the CMU community can do in and around the library. At the annual Libraries gathering on July 31, faculty and staff joined together to record 125 short-form videos highlighting physical and virtual spaces, resources, services, and activities.

Related: About us, Using the Libraries

Room to Imagine

Julia Corrin knows Carnegie Mellon's impact on the world runs deep. As the university's archivist and associate dean for Distinctive Collections, she's spent years cataloging achievements and preserving institutional memory. But researching CMU's 125th anniversary exhibit continues teaching her something startling: she's still discovering innovations she never knew existed.

Related: Archives and CMU History, Events and Exhibits, About us

University Archives Alumni: Where Are They Now?

Through the Carnegie Mellon University Archives, CMU students with a passion for primary sources and collective memory can dive into the intellectual, cultural, and administrative history of the university, exploring the past and investigating how it informs the present moment. We checked in with 2024 Dietrich College graduate Nicholas Mlakar, who worked as a student assistant in the Archives, to see where that passion has taken him post-graduation.

Related: Archives and CMU History, About us