
When Jill McKinstry led the 2011-13 renovation of the University of Washingtonâs Odegaard Undergraduate Library, she had half the time it would normally take. To pull it off, the project needed a master organizer, someone who could find the right partners off campus and marshal the constituents on campus.
Naturally, with McKinstry leading the way, it came in ahead of time and under budget, and it won rave reviews.
McKinstry, the retired director of Odegaard and special assistant to the dean of UW libraries with a long list of professional accomplishments, has been named the 2020 Information School Distinguished Alumna.
The Odegaard renovation capitalized on McKinstryâs talent for building partnerships and incorporating studentsâ needs. The $17 million project, done in just two years, turned a building that was best described as âbrownâ into a bright, open space where students congregate and collaborate. It brought the first active-learning classrooms to the UW campus.
âIt was really one of the most thrilling, exciting, fun projects Iâve ever been through,â she said. âWhat I love about the library is the collaborative nature. If you as a student want to visualize your learning, you now have whiteboards everywhere to write out what youâre thinking, what youâre learning.â
Odegaard is perhaps the most visible legacy of McKinstryâs time at the UW, but she left her mark in many ways, said longtime friend and colleague , vice provost and dean of UW Libraries.
âWe call her âthe fabulous Jill McKinstry,ââ Wilson said. âShe has fabulous people skills. Sheâs a great mentor. She is a great organizer. She can envision what needs to be done. She empowers staff to be creative and innovative. Sheâs very technologically savvy.â
Wilson noted that McKinstry became a go-to person for campus committees and task forces on undergraduate education.
âShe became very much the voice of the student experience, and actually started using words that we now use all the time â student success, holistic approach,â Wilson said.
Marcie Stone, a member of the MLIS Advisory Board and longtime advocate for the Information School, nominated McKinstry for the award. She listed a litany of accomplishments, among them: making Odegaard available to students 24 hours a day; co-leading the development of the first library graphical user interface; co-developing a course, to introduce undergraduates to different aspects of UW research; and partnering with the Office of Undergraduate Research to provide opportunities and mentoring for students.
Some common threads run through McKinstryâs work during her UW career: a desire to improve the undergraduate experience, and a belief that libraries play a vital role for students.
"I fell in love with every single class, whether it was learning about computers, database management, information retrieval, childrenâs literature â I loved it all."
âEach of these programs and accomplishments not only benefits the University of Washington, but also serves as a benchmark for other library programs and contributes to the improvement of undergraduate library services throughout the profession,â Stone wrote in making the nomination.
A committee of past iSchool Distinguished Alumni Award recipients chooses finalists for the award from nominations made by alumni, faculty and staff. Dean Anind Dey then chooses the recipient.
McKinstry is a native Seattleite and triple-Husky. After earning her undergraduate degree at the UW, she spent the early part of her career teaching before going back for her masterâs in Spanish literature and linguistics. She thought about going for a Ph.D. in that field before getting the itch to take classes in what was then the Graduate School of Library and Information Science.
âI fell in love with every single class, whether it was learning about computers, database management, information retrieval, childrenâs literature â I loved it all,â she said.
After earning her masterâs in librarianship in 1987, she got a part-time, temporary job in the UW Fisheries-Oceanography Library. That led to a 27-year career as a UW librarian, 17 as director of Odegaard.
Since retiring in 2014, she served a three-year term on the UW Retirement Association Board of Directors and was president from 2017-18. Sheâs been active in the community, leading the effort to add a safe pathway for pedestrians and bicyclists into Mount Baker Park in Seattle and joining the board of the Grandmothers Against Gun Violence Foundation.
McKinstry also continues to give to the librarianship profession. Sheâs a member of the iSchoolâs MLIS Advisory Board and, with her husband, Joe, established the in 2001. The endowment provides financial assistance to graduate students from underrepresented populations to pursue an MLIS degree. So far, the McKinstry Fellowship has introduced 14 students to careers in academic librarianship. In 2016, the McKinstrys added to their support of the iSchool with the establishment of an endowed faculty fellowship in Native American Indigenous Knowledge.
âIt is a gift to be a librarian and Iâm just extremely grateful to have had that opportunity, on so many levels,â she said. âLibrarians are really good people and it is a privilege to serve in this field.â
Learn more about the Odegaard renovation and hear from McKinstry in this video: