Charles H. Smith: Bio After growing up in a (very) small town in rural northwestern Connecticut and graduating second in my high school class, I was accepted on early decision and attended Wesleyan University in Middletown. Wesleyan is one of the very best undergraduate science institutions in the country, and I did not finish second in my class there! Apart from the heightened competition (e.g., though I eventually did earn my Ph.D, all three of the other geology majors in my graduating class beat me to it), I was beginning to suffer some effects from chronic and continuing bouts with narcolepsy and hypoglycemia, and ended up in the bottom third of the class. This, together with some rather low geology advanced GRE test scores, killed any thoughts of graduate school for the time being. Then commenced several years of factory employment and taking the odd class during the 1970s recession period. I became interested in systems theory and metaphysics at this time, reading dozens of works by writers such as Teilhard de Chardin, Ouspensky, von Bertalanffy, and Paul A. Weiss. In 1975 or 1976 I retook the advanced GREs in geology, but did no better than the first time around. However, I also retook the aptitude tests and added the advanced tests in biology and, on a whim, geography. In four of the sub-tests on these last three I scored above the 99th percentile (including two 800s), which caused me to reconsider graduate school, this time in geography. In 1977 I entered the program at Indiana University, finishing my M.A. two years later. I then continued on in geography at the University of Illinois, finishing my Ph.D. there in 1984. This was capped by a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Melbourne. On paper, my graduate studies record looked pretty good: degrees from excellent programs, 3.9/4.0 GPAs in both, a post-doc at the best university in Australia, and seven articles published in peer-reviewed venues as first author. But in 1986 my rather unusual combination of interests--as a geography-trained zoogeographer more interested in historical than ecological problems, statistics than mathematics, and in the history and philosophy of my field than in its technical areas (such as GIS and remote sensing)--caught up with me. For four years I could find no paying work at all, though this "freedom" left me with the free time to explore a number of unusual systems theory-related thoughts. Finally, in 1990 I picked up some contracts administration work as a temp. In 1992 I realized I might be able to apply my broad background and knowledge of the research process itself to a career in academic librarianship, and at the beginning of the next year moved to Pittsburgh, where I completed the MLS program at Pitt at the beginning of 1995. I was made Western Kentucky University's Science Librarian shortly thereafter. I am now Professor of Library Public Services here, having been promoted to that position in 2004. Since about 1999 I have been engaged primarily in the production of monograph-scale information sources and services, including four book projects and eight websites. I may continue in this already reasonably productive direction, but recently I have also felt an increasing urge to set out the results of some of my earlier theoretical explorations, "left-field" in nature though they may be considered. _________________________ All pages at this site Copyright 2006-2007
by Charles H. Smith. All rights reserved. Feedback: charles.smith@wku.edu |