This Just In: Young Adults Love Libraries | The Digital Shift


A brand-spanking-new Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life study (just released this morning) has found some surprising information about young people and their opinions of libraries and print books.

Here’s the lead:

Belying the stereotype that younger Americans completely eschew print for digital, those ages 16-29 have wide-ranging media and technology behaviors that straddle the traditional paper-based world of books and digital access to information.

One major surprise in a new report from the Pew Research Center is that even in an age of increasing digital resources, those in this under-30 cohort are more likely than older Americans to use and appreciate libraries as physical spaces – places to study for class, go online, or just hang out. [emphasis added]

See the full article: This Just In: Young Adults Love Libraries | The Digital Shift.

Ten (10) portals & 7.77 million views on HLWIKI | The Search Principle


Ten (10) portals & 7.77 million views on HLWIKI | The Search Principle

I have used HLWIKI a number of times throughout my MLIS program. I found the resource extremely useful in researching emerging technologies librarianship, competencies, social media and information technology, sources for health information and other topics. Highly recommend.

hlwiki

Funding Library Projects on Kickstarter and Indiegogo


Do you love libraries? Are you philanthropic or just want to support? How about funding a Kickstarter or Indiegogo library project? These projects have a multiple donation levels to accommodate whatever one can afford. Libraries are contending with increasingly constrained budgets, funding, and staffing shortages, as well as aging infrastructure. These funding platforms offer another avenue for libraries to use to fund their creative, educational and infrastructure projects with your help.

On Kickstarter you could help fund: 

LIBRARY FOR ALL: a digital library for the developing world

Unlocking knowledge to those living in poverty by providing access to ebooks and other digital content in low bandwidth communities. Library For All was founded for those who have little or no access to books in developing countries.

When Rebecca McDonald moved to Haiti after the 2010 earthquake, she wasn’t a career humanitarian. Her most recent job was overseeing construction projects for Australia’s Department of Public Works. But while construction management might seem a useful set of skills in a country where so much had been destroyed, McDonald was moved by something else.

“Most schools have less than 30 books and these books are so precious they are not allowed to leave the school. Imagine if the entire span of knowledge available to you was just 30 books!” she wrote on her blog.

Meanwhile, she had access to all the world’s knowledge on her Kindle. It was the seed for the charitable project for which she is now fundraising on Kickstarter: Library for All. Via Creating A Digital Library For Bookless Students | FactCompany.

On Indiegogo you could help fund:

Park Slope North – Helen Owen Carey – Child Development Center Library Project

The Park Slope North (Helen Owen Carey) Child Development Center (PSN-CDC) is a nonprofit preschool serving the needs of families from a diverse range of socioeconomic and cultural backgrounds in Brooklyn and beyond, with funding provided by the Administration for Children’s Services supporting approximately 50 percent of the student body.

This year, the Parents’ Advisory Committee (PAC), in conjunction with the center’s new director, are creating a new library and multipurpose space. Teachers and students will use the new library for literacy-based and dramatic activities in addition to housing the school’s ever-growing collection of children’s books.

Libraries, librarians and stakeholders can come up with unique funding project ideas such as Peter Brantley’s suggestion for a new library publication:

Shelf-talkers: Kickstarting a new library journal | PWxyz Blog

It’s time for librarians to develop our own journalism. The basis of the American Library Association – individual membership vs. institutional affiliation – evidences the affinity for an in-community approach. A new library publication – call it Shelf Talkers – could be supported through librarian subscriptions, rather than vendor dollars, to assure complete editorial independence, lowering the risks of special interests. 

Shelf Talkers – or whatever we wanted to call it – could run with an editor-in-chief, an operations manager, and a small cadre of staff reporters. Additional contributors from the library world – one of the most literate and expressive communities around – could fill out a publication which need not worry itself with “issues” or “volumes” or printed matter. Its reach would be global, as would its contribution base – an inherent advantage of a networked publication.

Recent Ebook News & ALM DCWG Big Six Matrix for Ebook Licenses Comparison


See the full article at DCWG Big Six Matrix for Ebook Licenses Comparison | American Libraries Magazine. Link for the matrix here.

Recent Ebook News

Throwing the Books at Each Other | Inside Higher Ed


“…a large percentage of the library’s non-fiction collection was being removed in a hasty and ill-considered project driven by an awkward glitch in planning. Some temporary workers had been hired to insert RFID tags into the books and it seemed foolish not to remove outdated books from the collection first, particularly since the RFID tags had yet to arrive. So to make use of the workers who were already on the clock, that removal project was suddenly shifted into high gear, and soon the whole thing was smoking and the wheels fell off, but not before thousands of books were discarded.”

via Throwing the Books at Each Other | Inside Higher Ed

Urbana Free Library Scrutinized Over Book Weeding | Illinois Public Media

Illinois: “Library Director Says Mistake Was Made in Book ‘Weeding’” | InfoDocket – LibraryJournal

I’m sure the Annoyed Librarian is going to have a comment about this one!

How Not To Be A Dick To A Librarian | xoJane


Librarians aren’t usually in the habit of name calling (unless you catch us before we’ve had our coffee or when the catalog is down), so it’s with a bit of trepidation that I’m writing this. But then I thought, what the hey–even librarians should be able to take a moment and vent our frustrations!

We’ve become pretty comfortable getting up on our soapboxes to protest in the face of budget cuts and layoffs, but sometimes it’s hard to actually express some annoyance about common viewpoints towards libraries. After all, we truly are here to help people. It’s our passion. Nobody chooses to become a librarian for the money (because there’s never very much of that to go around). We choose this profession not just because it’s our calling but because we believe in the power of access to information to transform people’s lives.

Yet too often, no matter how many times we may repeat that mantra to ourselves, it seems that the same tired misinformation is what gets regurgitated in the media and even occasionally by our friends and families: Libraries are outdated. Nobody reads books anymore. You can find anything you need to know online. As any librarian will tell you, we’ve heard it all before… 

See the full article at How Not To Be A Dick To A Librarian | xoJane.

Library For All Builds Ebook Platform for Developing World – The Digital Shift


Library For All has launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund an ebook platform that would enable the distribution of ebooks in the developing world. The organization is seeking $100,000 in pledges to roll out a pilot program at the Respire School in Gressier, Haiti this fall.

via Library For All Builds Ebook Platform for Developing World – The Digital Shift.

What is Entrepreneurial Librarianship? | Information Space


Most librarians don’t think of themselves as entrepreneurs, but there is a growing interest in entrepreneurial librarianship, the abstract idea connecting social entrepreneurship with the services librarians provide every day.

See the full article: What is Entrepreneurial Librarianship?  | Information Space.

Librarians: Your Most Valuable MOOC Supporters – OEDB.org


Libraries offer resources, from research to licensing support, that are essential to the future of MOOCs as they grow both in numbers and in seriousness. As MOOCs become an increasingly valid and valuable resource, it’s clear that they can benefit from another great educational resource: librarians.

via Librarians: Your Most Valuable MOOC Supporters – OEDB.org.

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Librarians: Your Most Valuable MOOC Supporters - OEDB.orgCC. Originally posted to Flickr by mathplourde. Retrieved from Wikipedia.

The Social Library Case Studies at UBC Library | UBC Library


The Social Library Case Studies at UBC Library | UBC Library