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From
online.wsj.com
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May 15, 8:15 AM
A look at how America's central libraries are struggling to adapt their forms and functions to a rapidly changing world (RT @WSJ: The future of libraries isn't an open book. By JULIE V. IOVINE: "The relevance of these gloriously inflated book boxes is being questioned in an age that looks to the Internet for its intellectual resources."
Karen du Toit's insight:
The changing library challenged by a constantly changing environement. The goal posts are moving the whole time! Delete the scoop?
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Here are some images from numerous resources that typify something unexpected in a library. They draw attention to libraries and open up the idea of "library" to new understanding and new customers...
Karen du Toit's insight:
Bright ideas of libraries doing it differently!! Delete the scoop?
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From
www.smh.com.au
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April 30, 5:28 AM
Catherine Armitage:
The State Librarian of NSW, Alex Byrne, says librarians no longer expect or want libraries to be places of quiet solitude. Rather than walking around saying ''shhh'' and waving their steel rulers to enforce silence, he said contemporary librarians understand that ''using information, learning and reading are not just solitary activities''. ''We have quiet places in the library for people who want to concentrate but we don't insist on quiet libraries. That is because we realise it is a social activity'', Dr Byrne said. In navigating the complex new world of information overload, people don't just read books any more. They interact with information, and with each other to make sense of it. Thanks to the public library's role as a gateway to e-government services, a librarian today is as likely to help you apply online for a parking permit or submit a legal form digitally as find you a book. They are the ''third space, not business, not the home but a third and neutral working space'', said Dr Byrne: ''We like to think it is a mall of ideas and knowledge.'' Silence is not so golden in the modern library...
Librarians no longer expect or want libraries to be places of quiet solitude. Rather than walking around saying ''shhh'' and waving their steel rulers to enforce silence, he said contemporary librarians understand that ''using information, learning and reading are not just solitary activities''. Via Leanne Windsor, Anjan Das
Karen du Toit's insight:
Of course! Just a great reminder! Delete the scoop?
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By Jeff Hicks: "Some libraries are solemn stone penitentiaries for bound pages and gagged mouths. (Cambridge libraries go beyond the bookmobile http://t.co/Ig3OfiXR7a Congrats to @CLibraries An innovative place!
[...] Ideas Unlimited has been their slogan for two years. Cambridge staff even wear clothing with the slogans. No other library in Canada has its own fashion line. [...] A first-floor library dining experience is on the menu. A teen dungeon will spread across the basement. A family library and terrace promises second-floor views up and down the Grand River. A digital lab on the top floor pledges a mash up of 19th century columns and high-tech gadgetry. This will not be your grandma’s library, crammed inside an 1884 heritage building. “It’s a great idea,” Ridley said. “I hope they can pull it off.” And ideas, not books, are the foundation of their business."
Karen du Toit's insight:
The slogan is "Ideas Unlimited", with big plans in the future! Delete the scoop?
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From
oedb.org
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April 12, 5:15 AM
by Ellyssa Kroski Info Today’s informative Computers in Libraries conference just wrapped up yesterday in Washington, DC. If you didn’t get a chance to attend you may want to check out these terrific presentations by talented info pros!
Karen du Toit's insight:
10 presentations from the most recent Computers in Libraries 2013 conference > Great content!! Delete the scoop?
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Public sector cuts have led to a rise in the number of social enterprises running library services, but sustainability is a problem
[...] Social enterprises are, however, offering much more than books and computer access – the mixed-use community hub, argues Dunn, is the library model for the next 30 years: "We're open longer now than when the local council ran the libraries. I really believe that there's a wider range of services that we offer from our libraries now... There are things that the local council do well, no question. But they are unable to move quickly and introduce new services quickly when the community asks for it." The reason why social enterprises can, he says, "is that we are the local community – there is no them and us."
Karen du Toit's insight:
Social enterprises are the future of libraries! Definitely!! Delete the scoop?
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From
hughrundle.net
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March 31, 5:25 PM
Hugh Rundle: We are in an era of unprecedented change for libraries and the life of information. Bookstores throughout the western world are closing down. Libraries in the USA, UK and some in Australia are being defunded or closed. Many question the relevance of libraries, including some librarians. I am again surrounded by defeatists and the hopelessly optimistic. Many librarians appear to be searching for One Big Technology to save us. I believe that just like in Tasmania in the 1990s, this is a flawed search. [...] There are many other systems for sharing ideas. Why do we need libraries? What is our ‘unique value proposition’? Libraries are a system for sharing ideas in a way underpinned by the values of PRESERVATION, OPENNESS, FREEDOM and PRIVACY. This is our ‘Unique Value Proposition’.
Karen du Toit's insight:
The future of libraries lies in their unique value propositon! Good argument! Delete the scoop?
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On Feb. 15, the Archive Team, a loose collective of programmers and netizens, received its equivalent of a 911 call: The founder of Posterous, a blogging platform,announced the site was shutting down -- and taking its users' content down with it. After years spent convincing people to trust Posterous as the repository for their baby photos, recipes, musings and travelogues, the company gave its over 15 million users just ten weeks to back up their information before it would be permanently deleted. A handful of Archive Team volunteers quickly convened in a chatroom to figure out -- like they had many times before in similar situations -- how to save Posterous' millions of posts from disappearing with the site itself.
Karen du Toit's insight:
The porblem of our digital era: "digital objects become collateral damage"! Delete the scoop?
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Chief Librarian "I recently had the pleasure to be ‘interviewed’ via e-mail by the Royal Society Publishing (UK) newsletter editor for their regular feature “Spotlight on a Librarian”. Here is the URL if the link doesn’t work for some reason: http://newsletters.royalsociety.org/q/1N7XofzaQvq0eb/wv. Topics I discuss in the article include open source content access and affordable pricing to research articles among other points."
Karen du Toit's insight:
Interview with a librarian: "his work at three museum libraries and gives us an insight into the challenges faced today by research libraries with smaller FTE and smaller budgets to cope with the increasing cost of subscriptions" Delete the scoop?
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Japan’s Seikei University has ingeniously designed isolation spheres which can be used for meetings or for group work. Via Trudy Raymakers
Karen du Toit's insight:
Isolation spheres > Interesting concept! Delete the scoop?
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Tom Gauld has created a new fantastic cartoon. This time we can see how he imagines the library of the future.
Karen du Toit's insight:
Library of the future! Delete the scoop?
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From
www.oclc.org
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February 7, 3:31 AM
Lorcan Dempsey, OCLC's Vice President, Research and Chief Strategist, presented these slides in his keynote on 23 January 2013 at the 21st annual BOBCATSSS Conference in Ankara, Turkey. In his presentation, Lorcan compared the traditional "outside-in" library model and the new "inside-out" model, evolving as the library positions itself in a changing network environment. The traditional library was built on an "outside-in" model: information materials were brought to the institution and made available for use. This was appropriate in an age of information scarcity and high transaction costs. The only way effectively to interact with a large body of knowledge was to have it assembled close to the reader. Download: http://www.oclc.org/content/dam/research/presentations/dempsey/insideout.pptx Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/lisld/the-inside-out-library "Once the library assembled a collection and people came to the library to use it. Now, people build communication, workflows and behaviors around a variety of network resources. The library needs to think about how it is visible and relevant in those workflows and behaviors."
Karen du Toit's insight:
The new "inside-out" model for libraries!! Delete the scoop?
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Inna K(o)uper: CLIR blog has recently posted a piece on re-skilling for librarians by Christa Williford, focusing on digital humanities librarianship. What kind of skills do librarians need in order to be relevant in contemporary research environments? The list can be pretty long, moreover, there might be multiple lists. Another list was proposed in a report that Christa mentioned, “Re-skilling for research” by Research Libraries UK (RLUK). The report contains results of a series of studies that aimed to map the needs of researchers onto tasks to be undertaken by subject librarians. The report is long, but the message is the same over and over: librarians’ roles and skills are quite limited and traditional; they do not match the needs. Subject librarians are not involved at the early stages of research that involve conceptualization and planning. Most of the services are still offered in the areas of literature search and information management (how to store and organize everything). Services that are related to data collection, management, analysis and preservation are in their infancy at best.
Karen du Toit's insight:
Thoughts on the re-skilling of librarians! Interesting!
NELLCO's curator insight,
January 18, 9:41 AM
A new (to me) verb: re-skilling. Need to mull this one over. Not sure if it's perfect or ridiculous. Delete the scoop?
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From
dbl.lishost.org
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May 7, 8:25 AM
Among the more recognized and often repeated findings emerging from Ithaka S & R’s faculty research studies, including the recent 2012 report, is the revelation that faculty primarily perceive the academic library as their purchasing agent. [...] Four levels of user experience (column titled “Building Customer Communities is the Key to Creating Value“) and how to get there: 1. In Level One the organization is perceived by its customers as simply the supplier of some commodity 2. A Level Two experience would represent an improvement for librarians because it moves beyond content to a state where community members believe you help them accomplish something, but it’s more than just basic productivity. 3. At Level Three there is more engagement, emotional connection and relationship building. 4. the library achieves platform status.
Karen du Toit's insight:
Assessment of library experiences, and how to go to an engaged relationship with users!
repeatagain's curator insight,
May 9, 5:18 PM
what libraries deliver is a level one experience – and we need to do better than that... Delete the scoop?
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From
bluesyemre.com
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April 30, 5:47 AM
Academic and public libraries are much different today than they were even 15 years ago. And with even bigger changes on the horizon, what lies in store? In this systematic attempt to speak to academic and public librarians about the future of library services, Hernon and Matthews invite a raft of contributors to step back and envision the type of future library that will generate excitement and enthusiasm among users and stakeholders. Anyone interested in the future of libraries, especially library managers, will be engaged and stimulated as the contributors: Examine the current state of the library, summarizing existing literature on the topic to sketch in historical backgroundProject into the future, using SWOT analysis, environmental scans, and other techniques to posit how library infrastructure (such as staff, collections, technology, and facilities) can adapt in the decades aheadConstruct potential scenarios that library leaders can use to forge paths for their own institutions.The collection of knowledge and practical wisdom in this book will help academic and public libraries find ways to honour their missions while planning for the broader institutional changes already underway.
Karen du Toit's insight:
Future libraries! Link to book! Delete the scoop?
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By David Brooks: Why would your local library, a symbol of print-on-paper respectability, embrace open-source software, a symbol of the digital world’s most anti-establishment streak? Money, mostly. Open-source software, which can be used and tweaked by anybody and which carries no corporate charges, is reasonably close to being free. But that’s the only reason, say some area librarians who are about to switch circulation, acquisitions, Web development, and other functions to one of two major open-source systems for libraries, called Evergreen and Koha. “With proprietary (software), if you want an enhancement, a new feature, you’ll have to wait until demand builds for it. With Evergreen and Koha, you have access to a developer network worldwide that can work on it,” said Charlie Matthews, director of the Rodgers Library in Hudson. It is about to switch to Evergreen, originally developed for the Georgia state library system.
Karen du Toit's insight:
Open-source > it makes sense! Delete the scoop?
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RT @benshowers: How important will analytics be to libraries, now and in the future? Community Survey Results: http://t.co/nEHFpnUIUM #jiscLAMP\
Library Analytics – Community Survey Results (Nov 2012) from joypalmer Survey on SlideShare here: http://www.slideshare.net/joypalmer/survey-library-analyticsfindings We wanted to get a better handle on how important analytics will be to academic libraries now and in the future, and what demand might be for a service in this area, for example, a shared service that centrally ingests and processes raw usage data and data visualisations back to local institutions (and this, of course, is what LAMP is exploring further in more practical detail). We had response from 66 UK HE institutions, and asked a good number of questions. For example, we asked whether the following functions might be potentially useful:Automated provision of analytics demonstrating the relationship between student attainment and resource/library usage within institutionsAutomated provision of analytics demonstrating e-resource and collections (e.g. monographs) usage according to demographics (e.g. discipline, year, age, nationality, grade)Resource recommendation functions for discovery services
Karen du Toit's insight:
Library surveys a very important way to plan for the future! This one from November 2012 Delete the scoop?
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Better off Read: Municipalities are reinventing libraries for the digital age: http://t.co/RKv1DxdjwL
Three reinventions: 1. San Antonio’s BiblioTech 2. Project Ingeborg 3. Underground Library
Karen du Toit's insight:
Three ways libraries are being reinvented for the digital age! Delete the scoop?
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Stan Alcorn:
Karen du Toit's insight:
Libraries are innovative! Not new concepts, but worth citing as reasons why libraries are still relevant! Delete the scoop?
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From
flavorwire.com
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March 28, 5:22 AM
Face it: most librarians are probably cooler than you. After all, their job is to wrangle books, attract readers, and then get the two together — one of our own favorite activities. Though for many years, the librarian stereotype was a severe old lady who couldn’t stand excessive noise, the mold has changed (to the extent that even the New York Times has noticed). Now, many librarians are punk-rock agents of social change, complete with tattoos, tech savvy, and new ideas to get books to the people. After the jump, meet just a few of the very coolest librarians alive — and since we know there are hundreds out there, add your favorite book lender (or yourself) in the comments.
Karen du Toit's insight:
Cool librarians! Inspiring! Delete the scoop?
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Beyond using the library as a place to study, here are some other ways students can make use of library services provided by their universities: • Check out laptops, iPads or calculators • Go beyond Wikipedia and Google Term papers and theses rely on more than a simple Google search. Professors encourage students to use scholarly and peer-reviewed articles. University libraries have more than 600 databases... • Ask a librarian 24/7
Karen du Toit's insight:
Libraries are changing > spaces and services! Delete the scoop?
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A meeting place for librarians around the world:
The pilot program is just about off and running! Participants have been matched and over the next few days, we will be sending each person contact information for their program partner.
Karen du Toit's insight:
A great place to connect and learn from each other! Very excited about the prospect! Delete the scoop?
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By Alison Nastasi: We gathered a few passionate statements from 20 writers that emphasize why libraries aren’t “sentimental” institutions. See what Neil Gaiman, Judy Blume, Ray Bradbury, and other writers have to contribute to the conversation, below.
Karen du Toit's insight:
Still relevant! Delete the scoop?
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Using New York Times archives, Wikipedia, and 90 other web resources, they hope to prevent future diseases, riots, and death. This is one of a number of future-predicting initiatives, including “Recorded Future,” a site that analyzes news, blogs, and social media. Researchers are also trying to use Twitter and Google to track flu outbreaks. The researchers at Microsoft and Technion say that their software has the advantage over humans because of it’s ability to learn, research continuously, has no bias, and has a larger access to news.
Karen du Toit's insight:
Future prediction via archives! Interesting! Delete the scoop?
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By Steve Coffman:
Today's librarians face two futures and two questions. Will we live in an all-digital environment? Can we succeed in a digital future, whether all digital or hybrid? ... SUPPLEMENTAL CONTENT - The Doomsday Scenario (RT @glambert: So Now What?
Karen du Toit's insight:
Great argument for the sustainability of the roles of future librarians! Delete the scoop?
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Truly inspiring concept and use of space for the community in a library!