Check out the first picture of the Skokie Public Library Bookmobile in 1957
Check out this great Community Engagement Manager job at the Skokie Public Library!
Are you an experienced public library and/or community leader with a passion for building stronger and healthier communities? Do you enjoy and care deeply about working collaboratively with others and forming sustainable partnerships? Are you looking for an opportunity to serve a wide variety of community members and organizations, including immigrants, refugees, seniors, schools, childcare centers, bookmobile users, businesses, and those with disabilities? Bring your experience and expertise to Skokie Public Library as its next community engagement manager.
The community engagement manager will work closely with the director and a talented group of colleagues in pursuit of our established strategic goals and objectives. The community engagement manager will also help our community reflect on and navigate the complexities of today’s world through conversations with individuals and groups. The successful candidate will fully embrace our core service values of pursuing access and equity, cultivating learning and literacy, and engaging the community. Excellent skills with communication, facilitation, networking, and public speaking are highly desirable, as are positivity, flexibility, and mindfulness.
If you are interested in applying, please be sure to read our strategic plan for 2016-2019 and our organizational culture statement to make sure both resonate with you. Read the full job description below and learn more about our award-winning library.
We seek those who share our passion for serving the people of Skokie. We strive to reflect our community through our commitment to equity, diversity, and inclusion. We strongly encourage people of color, people who identify as LGBTQ+, and people with disabilities to apply. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Salary range is $59,211 to $88,816. Offers are made based on skills and experience between the minimum and mid-point of the full salary range.
Quality benefits play a vital role in promoting the health and well-being of our staff and their families, and this is why we offer a comprehensive benefit package including medical, dental, vision, and life insurance coverage to eligible employees. We also have generous paid time off and retirement plans for eligible employees.
Position open until filled. Preference will be given to those who apply by August 11, 2017.
Please provide a cover letter when applying: https://skokielibrary.bamboohr.com/jobs/view.php?id=17
2016 Skokie Public Library Staff Picks: Movies
The expert staff at the Skokie Public Library take a look back at the year and share their favorite titles.
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Mustang
2016by Deniz Erugüven
“Five Turkish sisters are kept imprisoned by their uncle, and arranged marriages begin. Spirited and rebellious, the girls find ways to fight back. This film is both gorgeous to look at and a moving, suspenseful, and satisfying story.”
Recommended by Lukie
“A delightful movie about five orphaned sisters who find creative ways to sabotage their strict and conservative Turkish relatives who have plans to marry each sister off.”
Recommended by Lee
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Tumbledown
2016by Sean Mewshaw
“Mewshaw’s feature length debut has a fresh, original feel to it. I loved the British Columbia setting, the script, and the story of a woman wanting to keep for herself her deceased husband’s songwriting legacy when a probing journalist/ fan tracks her down. The down-to-earth Rebecca Hall is perfect in the lead.”
Recommended by Lukie
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What We Do In the Shadows
2015by Jemaine Clement
“Not at all my typical choice, I’m so glad I watched this utterly hilarious comedy about vampire roommates. Eager to see more of anything by these New Zealand filmmakers, I also watched Taika Waititi’s 2010 film, Boy, which is a gem, and the enjoyably silly, sweet Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016).”
Recommended by Lukie
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Spotlight
2016by Tom McCarthy
“My pick for the best all-around movie of the year. The acting, direction and mostly the story and writing all are top-notch for this Best Picture winner. The trials and stresses of Boston Globe investigative reporters who uncover a sexual abuse scandal of epic proportions in Irish Catholic Boston.”
Recommended by Cecilia
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Eye In the Sky
2016by Gavin Hood
“An excellent drama/ thriller that relies more on intelligence and rapier sharp writing than on techno-gadgets and computer effects. In the middle of an impending operation to kill terrorists, one young girl changes everything and tests everyone. Excellent performances by Helen Mirren and the late Alan Rickman, in his final performance.”
Recommended by Cecilia
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The Second Mother
2016by Anna Muylaert
“This movie, set in São Paulo, Brazil, exposes class divisions with wry humor. Val (wonderfully played by well-known Brazilian actress, Regina Case) is a taken-for-granted live-in maid whose awareness of the ridiculousness of class barriers is awakened when her estranged daughter moves in. Excellent!”
Recommended by Lukie
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Bridge of Spies
2016by Steven Spielberg
“This dramatization of prisoner exchange negotiations following the capture of a US spy plane pilot in USSR territory kept me on the edge of my seat. Mark Rylant’s superb and understated performance as the Soviet spy who is the US prisoner to be exchanged, won an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, and boy did he deserve it.”
Recommended by Terry
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Love & Friendship
2016by Whit Stillman
“Jane Austen’s epistolary novel Lady Susan gets a clever turn from filmmaker Whit Stillman, and the result is a laugh out loud comedy of manners. With impeccable poise and flawless comedic timing, Kate Beckinsale nails it as the scheming title character. Truly, I haven’t seen Beckinsale this amusing since she starred in Cold Comfort Farm (based on the novel by Stella Gibbons).”
Recommended by Sharon
“It’s a match made in cinematic heaven as one of our wittiest, most verbally dexterous directors adapts Lady Susan, an obscure work by Jane Austen and just the sort of comedy of manners Stillman excels at.”
Recommended by Steven
“It is a truth universally acknowledged that this witty, diverting romp from Whit Stillman is one of the most entertaining Jane Austen adaptations in recent memory.”
Recommended by Annabelle
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Hell Or High Water
2016by Dale Dickey
“After seeing this in the theater, I wanted to run back to the library and tell my colleagues to catch it. A modern day western about two brothers who go on bank robbing spree in a desperate attempt to save the family ranch, everything about this movie clicks into place. The acting, screenplay, cinematography, music are outstanding; and, Jeff Bridges gives an Oscar-worthy supporting actor performance as the lawman hot on their trail.”
Recommended by Sharon
“One of the best American films to come out in 2016, Hell or High Water has a deceptively leisurely pace that sneaks up on you, accumulating gravitas as it seemingly drifts along.”
Recommended by Chris
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Kubo and the Two Strings
2017by Charlize Theron
“Extraordinary animation, with lovely and tender storytelling, marks this adventure tale set in ancient Japan. A brave one-eyed boy goes on a dangerous journey to find his father’s magical armor; but, he learns a great deal about family and friends, and I was in awe from start to finish.”
Recommended by Sharon
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The Witch
2016by Robert Eggers
“Smart horror movies are as rare as, well, smart action adventure movies. The Witch stands out with its meticulous craftsmanship and a truly frightening sense of supernatural dread.”
Recommended by Steven
“An exquisitely crafted amalgam of horror, period drama, and feminist manifesto, The Witch left me mesmerized and begging for a good dunk in holy water.”
Recommended by Annabelle
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Hunt for the Wilderpeople
2016by Taika Waititi
“This offbeat buddy comedy from New Zealand is an endearing story about a plucky orphan and his cantankerous foster uncle who go on the lam. I found it funny and touching, and adored the exuberant performance by teenager Julian Dennison.”
Recommended by Annabelle
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The Forbidden Room.
2016by Guy Maddin
“Back in high school an amazing teacher whispered in our ears, “Go forth and view Eraserhead.” And so we did. And our brains were lovingly fried by what may very well be the weirdest film ever made–until now. Guy Maddin’s Forbidden Room is a phantasmic fever dream, a cineaste funhouse, and the offspring of the nightmare baby featured in Lynch’s Eraserhead. Simultaneously exhausting and invigorating, I’m still desperately trying to wake up from it.”
Recommended by Chris
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Phoenix
2016by Christian Petzold
“Phoenix is a graceful, expertly crafted melodrama with an opening gambit so preposterous it threatens to fly off the rails. But it doesn’t. It’s played with just the right melodramatic panache. The riveting German-based actress Nina Hoss carries the weight all the way to the films jaw-dropping, damning conclusion. Really, endings, no matter what the artistic vehicle, don’t come much better than this.”
Recommended by Chris
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Queen of Katwe
2017by Madina Nalwanga
“This biopic about Phiona Mutesi, a young Ugandan girl whose family barely had enough food or proper shelter, becoming a world chess champion, is downright inspiring stuff. A big shout out to the entire cast playing out this incredible story, especially newcomer Madina Nalwanga in the lead role and Oscar winner Lupita Nyong’o as Phiona’s mother. Be sure to watch through the credits to see the real people along side the actors–their seconds of onscreen interaction had me reaching for Kleenex.”
Recommended by Sharon
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10 Cloverfield Lane.
2016by Dan Trachtenberg
“After an accident, Michelle wakes up in an underground room. She is chained up and unable to escape. What starts out at first as a classic tale of a woman in peril becomes so much more twisty and surreal. The audience, like Michelle, is unsure who or what to believe. If you weren’t claustrophobic before watching this thriller, you might be afterwards.”
Recommended by Lynnanne
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The Lobster
2016by Yorgos Lanthimos
“Yorgos Lanthimos, the Greek filmmaker of The Lobster, specializes in oddly plausible weirdness made with high production values. The Lobster, his first English language film, continues that trend. I’m not entirely sure what it was about (down with the tyranny of the normal?), though I found the whole thing riveting, its humor and pathos dryly intertwined all the way through to its queasy ending.”
Recommended by Chris
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A Brighter Summer Day = Gu Ling Jie Shaonian Sharen Shijian
2016by Dechang Yang
“Long unavailable in the United States (or anywhere, for that matter), Edward Yang’s A Brighter Summer Day was heralded in cinephile circles by those lucky enough to have seen it as one of the masterpieces of 20th-century cinema. Thankfully, the good folks at the Criterion Collection have released a beautifully restored version of the film this year and it’s a revelation. A Brighter Summer Day depicts Taipei, Taiwan in the early 60s from the vantage of its restless youth as they negotiate and explore their identities against the backdrop of a country that was itself forging a new identity. It’s grand filmmaking, both intimate and expansive, the greatest work of one of cinema’s greatest directors.”
Recommended by Chris