Monday, December 29, 2008

New Book

  • Renewing Professional Librarianship: a Fundamental Rethinking by Bill Crowley

FYI: This is part of the Beta Phi Mu Monograph Series. From the back cover, "While an information-centric definition may be appropriate for corporate information specialists, academic, public, and school librarians are already suffering the effects of devaluation. the remedy, Crowley says, is to embrace a concept called lifecyle librarianship, the ability to meet crucial public needs, 'from the lapsit to the nursing home,' by honing the library's time-honored role as a vital resource for reading and lifelong learning."

  • The Patriot Act: A Documentary and Reference Guide by Herbert N. Foerstel

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

New Book

  • Merchandising Made Simple: Using Standards and Dynamite Displays to Boost Circulation by Jenny LaPerriere and Trish Christiansen

Monday, December 8, 2008

New Book

  • Creating Your Library Brand: Communicating Your Relevance and value to Your Patrons by Elizabeth Doucett

Monday, November 24, 2008

New Material

  • Agents for Change in a Complex World - delivered 09/10/08 (Urban Libraries Council)

FYI: Each audio conference unit contains a CD-ROM of the conference audio plus access to event materials. The accompanying binder also contains printed materials.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

  • Senior High Core Collection 2008 Supplement to the Seventeenth Edition edited by Raymond W. Barber and Patricia Bartell

FYI: "This 2008 Supplement is to be used with the Seventeenth Edition, and comes to you as part of that service." (cover note)

  • The Public Library Policy Writer: A Guidebook with Model Policies on CD-ROM by Jeanette C. Larson and Herman L. Totter

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

New Book

  • Children's Literature in Action: A Librarian's Guide by Sylvia M. Vardell

Monday, September 29, 2008

New Book

  • Bringing Classes into the Public Library: A Handbook for Librarians by Marth Seif Simpson and Lucretia I. Duwel

FYI: According to the Introduction, the "goals of this book are:

  • To articulate the reasons and define a strategy for promoting a program of class visits to the public library
  • To highlight how a program of class visits can benefit the students, teachers, public library, and the community as a whole
  • To provide details instructions and easily adaptable templates to assist librarians in initiating an organized program of class visits
  • To encourage professionals in both public libraries and schools to seize this opportunity to partner and forge new relationships"

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Banned Book Week

The ALA Office of Inntellectual Freedom has produced a very interesting video about censorship in the library.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

New Book

  • Crash Course in Children's Services by Penny Peck

FYI: "Tips are given on: *Reference service, including the reference interview *Assisting parents and teachers * Managing children who are in the library to do homework or to wait for a ride* Helping children find recreational reading * Providing exciting, fun-filled storytimes for babies, toddlers, preschoolers, and families. The book also covers such topics as: * Marketing the library * Collection development (with practical advice on using book reviewing journals) * Programming (including author visits, summer reading programs, and school group library tours) * Working with children with physical , developmental, or learning disabilities * Meeting the challenges of changing family and community dynamics." -from the back cover

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

New Material

  • Foresight 2020 - Scenario Planning: Learning to Think in the Future Tense- delivered 06/04/08 (Urban Libraries Council)

FYI: Each audio conference unit contains a CD-ROM of the conference audio plus access to event materials. The accompanying binder also contains printed materials.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

New Book

  • Public Library Data Service Statistical Report 2008

FYI: Includes Public Library Finance Survey

What Do We Call Those People?

I was reading Stephen's Lighthouse Blog and he had an interesting post about what what do we call the people who use our libraries. We had this same discussion recently over a document a committee I'm on was drafting. We needed to come to an agreement over the term we would use for those people. Some of us use "patron" while some prefer "customer." Here's the post from Stephen's Lighthouse.


July 26, 2008
What to call library user communities....
Library Journal is running a poll on their homepage this week. It's interesting. I've been following research lately on what library users are called and what they want to be called.
Here's the poll as of this morning (Saturday July 26).



It's interesting since it doesn't reflect what I'm reading and hearing (including some of Joan Fyre Wiliams research) in the actual polls of what our communities want to be called!

I've always hated the term 'patrons' for library communities. Museums have patrons; Michelangelo had a patron; Foundations have patrons; Patrons give hug sums of money. Everyone using a library isn't a patron. (I also hate that it's the root of patronize which has a weird double meaning.) It's just an awful, patronizing word that delivers little value to us in positioning ourselves for success with our communities. Since so many use it, it'll probably take a 12 step program to get folks to stop this habit.

Client has been usurped by both the for fee consulting sector as well as other parts of the social service sector. Being a client of the penal system, foster care, social work case, etc. has a different meaning to being a client of a library and has different implications for service.

Customer is very business-oriented and feels like there is some ultimate monetary transaction will be involved. It feels very retail which isn't negative but has a different context. A monetary positioning is not a great positioning for most types of libraries. Also, library communities tell us that they definitely don't want to be called customers of libraries.

User just feels like it's librarian jargon that doesn't echo with our real communities. In the outside world it's been co-opted by the drug addict environment - drug user. We'd love our users to be addicted but it's a negative positioning. Also, I am uncomfortable with the concept of being 'used'. It's often negative to say "She used me." It really doesn't imply the benefits of library service well enough.

Reader is nice but limiting. Sometimes they're readers, but we don't really think of many of our services as merely reading - even if reading is a key skill for gaming, computer and web use. Books are great but libraries are so much more than all that. Also, libraries' competitive advantage against other options is our people and reader just positions us in that limited 'just books' model. The OCLC research showed that too many people think we're just book, books, books. We don't need to reinforce a strong positioning already, we need to expand on it.
So 'member' reflects something that works for me (and the research with actual library end users). I'm surprised that this jargon isn't entering our sphere quickly enough - habits are hard to break. This isn't a scientific poll but it [refects] the language that I hear folks using and those words aren't what our users want to hear. I like the way it implies an engagement with the library's community. It's great if people think of themselves as members of the library, with membership cards. Membership has it's privileges (American Express calls their cardholders members). National Geographic calls their subscribers members. I like the concept of promoting memberships in your local library. It starts with a respect for the two-way social contract between libraries and their communities.


Of course, when you're talking to city councils and municipal budget committees it's OK to throw in the odd 'voter' or 'taxpayer' or 'ratepayer' (grin). You gotta be political sometimes.
I am assuming that this LJ survey response is pretty public library focused, but maybe not. I think student, learner, faculty, etc. work in schools and academia and colleague, co-worker, etc. work in special libraries.


Points card
Credit card
Debit card
Social Security card
Driver's License card
Frequent Flyer card
ALA membership card
Library card
Library User card
Library Patron card
Library Customer card
Library Client card
Library Membership Card


I made a choice to join and I'm proud of it, and to be associated with others in my community.
Members, it works for me.
Stephen

Monday, July 28, 2008

New Books

  • The Quality Library: A Guide to Staff-Driven Improvement, Better Efficiency, and Happier Customers by Sara Laughlin and Ray W. Wilson
  • The Library Security and Safety Guide to Prevention, Planning, and Response by Miriam B. Kahn

Monday, July 21, 2008

New Book

  • Professional ASP.NET 3.5 In C# and VB by Bill Evjen, Scott Hanselman, and Devin Rader

Book Cart Drill Team

DEMCO sponsored the Book Cart Drill Team World Championship at ALA in Anaheim a few weeks ago and the team from Santa Monica Public Library won with an awesome routine. Here's the YouTube clip:

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

New Books

  • Content Management Systems in Libraries: case Studies edited by Bradford Lee Eden
  • Beginning ASP.Net 3.5: in C# and VB by Imar Spaanjaars
  • Professional SharePoint 2007 Web Content Management Development: Building Publishing Sites with Office SharePoint Server 2007 by Andrew Connell
  • Information Tomorrow: Reflections on Technology and the Future of Public and Academic Libraries edited by Rachel Gordon Singer

Monday, July 14, 2008

New Books

  • It Comes With the Territory: Handling Problem Situations in the Library (rev. ed.) by Anne M. Turner
  • Intellectual Property: Everything the Digital-Age Librarian Needs to Know by Timothy Lee Wheery
  • Microsoft Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 Level 1 Student Manual by element K
  • Demographic Profile (2008) by Ft. Myers - Lee County Office of Economic Development
Crash Course Series
  • Crash Course in Collection Development by Wayne Disher
  • Crash Course in Library Supervision: Meeting the Key Players by Dennis C. Tucker and Shelley Elizabeth Mosley
  • Crash Course in Marketing by Susan Webreck Alman

Thursday, June 19, 2008

New Books

  • Killer Web Content: Make the Sale, Deliver the Service, Build the Brand by Gerry McGovern
  • Teaching Information Literacy: A Conceptual Approach by Christy Gavin
  • Guide to Public Participation Addressing: Hearing Examiner Process, BOCC (Zoning & Weekly Meetings), Local Planning Agency (LPA) by Lee County (FL)

Monday, June 9, 2008

New Journal

The Professional Collection has added the Journal of Web Librarianship. From the homepage, “The Journal of Web Librarianship publishes material related to all aspects of librarianship as practiced on the World Wide Web, including both existing and emerging roles and activities of information professionals in the Web environment. The Journal of Web Librarianship strives to find a balance between original, scholarly research, and practical communications about relevant topics in Web librarianship.” If you would like to have this journal routed to you, please let me know.

There is also a LiveJournal presence available here.

New Book

  • Teen Girls and Technology: What's the Problem What's the Solution? by Lesley Farmer

From the back cover: "How do we kick-start girls' involvement with technology? In this dynamic book, Lesley Farmer provides a framework that teachers, librarians, youth workers, and parents can use to empower girls to succeed in today's technology-rich world. Farmer first examines the disconnect that many girls have with technology and then shows adults what they can do to change the current environment. Drawing on the work of experts in psychology, sociology, technology, and education, the book highlights school and after-school programs that have instilled confidence in teen girls and, as a result, increase their interest in technology-based careers. It also describes fun learning activities designed specifically for girls that are based on their developmental needs and interests."

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

New Book

  • A Box Full of Tales: Easy Ways to Share Library Resources Through Story Boxes by Kathy MacMillan

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

New Materials

  • Welcome Stranger: Public Libraries Build the Global Village - delivered 02/27/08 (Urban Libraries Council)

FYI: Each audio conference unit contains a CD-ROM of the conference audio plus access to event materials. The accompanying binder also contains printed materials.

  • Planning and Evaluating Library Networked Services and Resources edited by John Carlo Bertot and Denise M. Davis

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Serials - Add / Drops

This year, in preparation for the next fiscal year, 17 titles have been dropped from the Professional Collection to meet the goal of a 40% decrease in the budget. Certain titles are available online through a Web site or database and updates through RSS feeds. Additionally, certain titles would not have been available in a print edition and certain titles had been added as literary luxuries. The goal during the deselection process had been to maintain the overall integrity of the collection while providing the best possible resources for materials selection and professional development. Please remember that we will probably not see the loss of these periodicals until 2009.

The following subscriptions will be dropped:


  • Foreword

  • Leadership Strategies

  • Leading for Results

  • Office Pro

  • Team Management Briefings

  • Bookmarks

  • Journal of Library Administration

  • Public Library Quarterly

  • Inside Microsoft Excel (print edition discontinued)

  • Inside Microsoft Office (print edition discontinued)

  • Inside Microsoft PowerPoint (print edition discontinued)

  • Inside Microsoft Word (print edition discontinued)

  • Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books - (available through online archives)

  • School Library Journal - (available through SLJ Web site, online newsletter, RSS, ProQuest)

  • The Believer

  • McSweeney's

  • Office Professional

I will maintain a list of subscribers as as well as journals dropped for future use. If you have a question about alternative methods of accessing articles, please contact me. Please let me know if the Professional Collection can help you in your professional development.

Monday, May 12, 2008

New Books

  • Reading Group Choices 2008 (14th Annual Edition)
  • Shelf-Esteem by Sandra Kitain

Monday, April 28, 2008

From Shelf Space Blog at ForeWord Magazine

This is an entry by Eva Mays on the Shelf Space blog at ForeWord Magazine:

We Are All Library Patrons (At Least, We Should Be)
"We librarians are easily exasperated by our patrons. There are entire online communities devoted to anti-patron sentiments, such as The Society for Librarians who Say MotherF***er and Library Workers Against Stupid Patrons. I’ll admit I read these blogs daily, and have on occasion contributed to them. While some patrons really are horrible and toxic, most are simply people who are not familiar with the library, through no fault of their own. I think that many librarians have lost the ability to empathize with the people we serve.

We get a lot of inane questions like, “Where is the bathroom?” and “Where are your DVDs?” The answers seem so obvious to us. Everything is exactly where it has always been, not to mention that there are squillions of helpful signs to point the disoriented patron in the right direction. Do we think patrons are numbskulls? Many times, yes. In my opinion, this is partly due to the fact that we don’t view them as individuals, we see them as branches of the same entity. Surely if we tell one patron where the New Fiction Section is in the morning, we shouldn’t have to tell another patron the same thing in the afternoon. Didn’t they get the memo?

I think we lose empathy for our patrons because we forget what it is like to be one of them. I don’t know many librarians who visit other libraries as a patron. To see how they do things at that library, sure. But to check out a novel? Use the internet? Sit around and read? Of course not. We can do that at work.

Recently I was forced to be a library patron. It was Tax Day, and I had yet to make photocopies of my W-2s to send in with my forms. Unfortunately, it was also my day off from work, and it didn’t make sense to make the 20-mile round trip commute to use the copying machine when there was another library (that likely had its own copier) less than two miles away. So what did I do? I went to my neighborhood library for the very first time.

I walked through the doors and scanned the area hoping the photocopier would be obvious, but after a few seconds I gave up and went up to the information desk. When it was my turn, I politely asked if the library had a copier. The staff person just pointed wordlessly over my right shoulder. Oh. It was right behind me.

But it was not the same kind of photocopier that I was used to! It was completely different! The staff person had to leave her desk and (patiently, to her credit) show me where to insert my coins and where the copies would come out.

Thoroughly embarrassed, I quickly made the necessary copies and left. Spending forty hours a week in one library did not mean that I could find my way around any library. Who knew? Taken from my home turf, I was just like the people who make me want to tear my hair out on a daily basis.

To serve the community well, library employees need to be library patrons too. The extra time and effort will be worth the understanding we will gain. Maybe then there will be less fodder for angry, patron-dissing blogs. "

Friday, April 25, 2008

New Book

  • Cataloging and Classification: An Introduction (3rd ed.) by Lois Mai Chan

FYI: The back cover states, " Fully updated to incorporate changes that have occurred since the 1994 edition, Cataloging and Classification: An Introduction is the standard text for teaching and understanding this crucial aspect of library science."

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

New Book

  • How to Use Web 2.0 In Your Library by Phil Bradley

FYI: Includes RSS, Weblogs, Podcasts, start pages, social bookmarking, building your own search engines, IMs, photo-sharing utilities, and more.

Friday, April 4, 2008

New Books

  • American Reference Books Annual (vol. 39) edited by Shannon Graff Hysell
  • Partners in Literacy: Schools and Libraries Building Communities Through Technology by Sondra Cuban and Larry Cuban

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Help With Pronunciation

Here's a helpful Web site to help with the pronunciation of author's names:
http://www.teachingbooks.net/pronunciations.cgi The authors and illustrators pronounce their own names and tell stories about their names. The featured authors are children's and YA authors. Helpful Hint: When I am unsure of the pronunciation of an author, a character, or a place name and I know I might need it in a book discussion, I check out the audio version and fast-forward to the parts I need.

Monday, March 24, 2008

OverDrive



OverDrive to Distribute MP3 Audiobooks to Booksellers and Libraries


(Cleveland, OH) - March 19, 2008 - OverDrive® (www.overdrive.com), the leading digital book distributor to online retailers, libraries, and schools, announced today that it will expand its catalog of download audiobooks to include titles in MP3 format without DRM. Borders, Inc. (NYSE: BGP) will be the first bookseller to offer OverDrive MP3 Audiobooks without DRM at http://audiobooks.borders.com/and at Digital Centers inside select Borders store locations. OverDrive MP3 Audiobooks will be compatible with nearly every MP3 player and mobile phone on the market including iPod, Zune, iPhone, and Creative Labs products.

OverDrive MP3 Audiobooks will go on sale in May at Borders.com with thousands of best-selling titles from Random House Audio, Blackstone Audiobooks, Hachette Book Group, Books In Motion, plus dozens of other publishers. The new catalog of MP3 titles for retail will be added to OverDrive’s catalog of approximately 20,000 DRM-protected digital audiobooks and over 100,000 eBooks in popular formats.

"OverDrive MP3 Audiobooks will dramatically increase the market for download spoken word titles through our global retail network," said Erica Lazzaro, OverDrive Senior Licensing Counsel. "Publishers, authors, and customers will benefit from MP3 compatibility of audiobooks with millions of mobile phones and MP3 players including the iPod."

OverDrive MP3 Audiobooks are engineered for ease-of-use, convenient navigation, and simple transfer to portable players. Long unabridged audiobooks are divided into parts for easy access by both dial-up and broadband users, simple point-and-click transfer to portable players, and easy burning to CD. OverDrive Media Console, a free software program installed on more than 2 million PCs, is specifically designed for audiobooks and includes advanced listening features such as bookmarking and play speed control. OverDrive also plans to release OverDrive Media

Console for Mac in conjunction with the launch of OverDrive MP3 Audiobooks.
Following the Borders.com retail launch in May, a limited selection of OverDrive MP3 Audiobooks will be added to OverDrive’s extensive library network. OverDrive MP3 Audiobooks for library lending will include thousands of award-winning titles from Blackstone Audio, Books In Motion, CSA Word, and Audio Evolution, among others.

About OverDrive, Inc.

OverDrive is a leading full-service digital distributor and supplier of eBooks, audio books, music, and video. We deliver secure management, DRM protection, and download fulfillment services for hundreds of publishers and institutions (rights holders) and thousands of libraries, schools, retailers, and aggregators serving millions of end users. Founded in 1986, OverDrive is based in Cleveland, OH. www.overdrive.com
Media Contact:David BurleighDirector of MarketingOverDrive, Inc.dburleigh@overdrive.com216-573-6886 Ext 218

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

New Books

  • Helping Homeschoolers in the Library by Adrienne Furness
  • Beginning SharePoint 2007 Administration: Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 and Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 by Göran Husman
  • Microsoft SharePoint 2007 Unleashed by Michael Noel and Colin Spence
  • Essential SharePoint 2007: Delivering High-Impact Collaboration by Scott Jamison and Mauro Cardarelli, with Susan Hanley
From:
DISPATCHES FROM
A PUBLIC LIBRARIAN
By SCOTT DOUGLAS
Dispatch 28 (3/3/08)


U.S. News & World Report recently selected librarian as one of the best careers for 2008. Were they right? I suppose it depends on whom you ask, but to help you decide I have compiled an objective list of the top reasons to be (or not to be) a librarian.

Ten reasons to be a librarian

You totally get to classify things.
Where else are you going to ruin a person's day over a 20-cent fine?
The funky glasses make you easily mistaken for a hipster.
You can make up whatever you want and people will believe you just because you're a librarian.
You get first dibs on unclaimed items in the lost-and-found box.
You get to be in charge of buying furniture that is least likely to show a piss stain.
Playing Scrabble on the Internet can be considered "professional development."
The most stressful thing that happens is arguing with people over why they cannot view their favorite pornography website.
Get to spend two hours designing a sign that says the library will be closed for the holidays.
No one says anything when you fall asleep during a meeting.

Ten reasons not to be a librarian

Who wants to go to grad school for two years to learn theory you will never use?
Those little punk teenagers on skateboards.
People kind of expect you to know things.
If you know enough about how to find information to be a good librarian, you can definitely make more money doing something else.
People automatically assume that you have some weird fetish for cats.
People expect you to help them find things when you are not working just because you know how.
Some people think you are weird because you classify things in your house—like clothes and dishes.
Writing library policy can be about as fun as watching paint dry.
Every great idea you have is likely to get shot down as soon as someone says, "Let's form a committee to decide things."
At some point in your career, someone will, or will try to, physically assault you over something incredibly lame (like not giving him or her more time on the Internet).

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

New Materials

  • Sudden Selector's Guide to Business Resources by Robin Bergart and Vivian Lewis

FYI : ALCTS/CMDS Sudden Selector's Series, #1

  • Go Green! The Future of Libraries & Sustainable Communities - delivered 12/12/07 (Urban Libraries Council)
FYI: Each audio conference unit contains a CD-ROM of the conference audio plus access to event materials. The accompanying binder also contains printed materials.

Monday, March 3, 2008

New Materials

  • Fundamentals of Technical Services Management by Sheila S. Intner with Peggy Johnson
  • Making Library Web Sites Usable: A LITA Guide by Tom Lehman and Terry Nikkel
  • School Library Management (6th ed.) edited by Judi Repman and Gail Dickinson
  • Libraries Prosper with Passion, Purpose and Persuasion!: A PLA Toolkit for Success by the Metropolitan Group in Collaboration with the PLA @ your library Task Force

FYI: Libraries Prosper with Passion, Purpose and Persuasion! will be presented at the 2008 ALA Annual Conference in Anaheim on June 28 (1:30-3:30) by several of the members of the task force/authors.

Monday, February 25, 2008

New Materials

  • Sexual Harassment: A Commonsense Approach - DVD (employee version), 25 minutes

FYI: "Most people know that sexual conduct is not appropriate in the workplace. Yet it continues to be a problem. While some individuals persist in behavior that is obviously rude or disrespectful, even well-meaning employees can become confused when it appears in more subtle forms. When does it cross the line? This program explores the definition of 'welcome' and 'unwelcome' behavior. It encourages employees to speak up if there is a concern, so small problems can be solved before they get out of hand. It also shows examples of obviously illegal sexual harassment, and sends a direct message to harassers: STOP immediately!" -from the DVD cover

  • Harassment and Diversity: Respecting Differences - DVD (employee version), 16 minutes

FYI: "Harassment is not just about sex. It can also be about race, religion, age, disabilities and other protected characteristics. It can occur in any workplace where diverse employees interact. Narrated by Kevin O'Neill, an attorney with Littler Mendelson, PC, this program shows examples of illegal harassment and why such behavior is not acceptable. It explains how each employee can help contribute to an atmosphere of inclusiveness and respect while at work." - from the DVD cover

  • Managing Money: A guide for Librarians by Anne M. Turner
  • Microsoft SharePoint 2007 Technologies: Planning, Design and Implementation by Kevin Laahs, Emer McKenna, and Veli-Matti Vanamo

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Interesting Editorial - Current LJ

Blatant Berry: The Vanishing Librarians
The library becomes a dehumanized supermarket or a chaotic bookstore
By John N. Berry III, Editor-at-Large, jberry@reedbusiness.com -- Library Journal, 2/15/2008
It looks like the “transformation” we seek for libraries and librarianship may turn out to be more of a “deskilling” of library jobs than an enhancement of the profession. More and more working librarians are “managed” by a new breed of library leader. Their model for the new public library is that dehumanized supermarket or the chaotic disorganization of the largest Barnes & Noble.
As this process unfolds, the once professional responsibilities of librarians are being dumbed down into the duties of retail clerks or the robotic responses of machines. Our circulation desks are disappearing. The humans who once greeted and discussed with patrons our wares and services as they dispensed them are being replaced by self-service. Those circulation clerks are either being terminated or sent to work elsewhere in the library.
Our reference services and the desk from which they were delivered are gone, too, replaced by wandering “librarians,” with or without an MLS. They are supposed to be proactive in searching out patrons in need but are too often summoned on walkie-talkies or terminals to come to the aid of only those who ask or to respond to the few inquiries that arrive online. Of course, we need fewer and fewer of these librarians, because patrons are urged to do it all for themselves, via Google, PACs, or whatever they discover through our terminals or their own laptops and PCs.
Our catalogers began to disappear with the takeover of that function by OCLC, the nonprofit that aspires to be a corporation in this brave new retail library world. The standardized result of the effort is bypassed by patron and librarian alike, as they turn to the more friendly Amazons, Googles, et al., for the less precise, more watered-down “metadata” that has replaced what used to be cataloging. Apparently, users don’t miss the old catalog, except as a familiar artifact, which is testimony to how low this dumbing down has taken us.
In the new model, that most sacred of our professional duties, the selection of materials to build services and collections, is turned over to either small centralized teams of two or three librarians and clerks, or in extreme cases to an external vendor, usually a library book distributor.
The resulting “destination” libraries resemble the cookie-cutter design of the grocery store, aimed at making sure everyone who comes in goes out with “product” (books, CDs, DVDs, or downloads). What the patron takes is of as little concern to the storekeeper librarian as it is to the supermarket manager. The success of the enterprise is measured in the number of products collected by patrons, now called “customers.” It is no longer measured in the usefulness or impact of the service on the quality of life in the community served.
Many of the American Library Association-accredited LIS programs that once claimed to “educate” the professional librarians who run these libraries have been invaded by faculty from other disciplines, a great many of whom are far more adept at the politics and pedagogy of academic survival than they are at the principled professional practice of librarianship.
Now the progress of this deskilling has come full circle. Having discovered that the manager librarians of these supermarket libraries need fewer and fewer professional librarians to staff their simplified operations, the governing authorities are beginning to decide they don’t need a professional librarian to manage them. Some have been turned over to successful business types from industry, some to lawyers, some to academic administrators or fundraisers, and some to professional financial managers.
The most surprising part is that so few library leaders have raised their voices in alarm or outrage at this erosion of the standards to which libraries once aspired. It is frightening to think that we will stand quietly by and watch as professional librarians disappear from libraries and with them the quality of the services and collections in which we once took such professional pride.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

New Book

Sex, Brains, and Video Games: A Librarian's Guide to Teens in the Twenty-first Century by Jennifer Burek Pierce

FYI: This title is also available at each regional in YA Reference.

Monday, February 18, 2008

New Books

  • The Accidental Technology Trainer: A Guide for Libraries by Stephanie Gerding
  • Microsoft SharePoint Server 2007 Bible by Wynne Leon, Wayne Tynes, and Simeon Cathey
LibrarianInBlack.net blog pointed out the coolest podcast gadget in her Feb 15 post. This gadget is from Think Geek and they are offering a complete podcasting kit with a nifty microphone and everything. You can start podcasting immediately!

Monday, February 11, 2008

New Books

  • Library and Information Center Management (7th ed.) by Robert D. Stueart and Barbara B. Moran
  • Strategic Planning for Results by Sandra Nelson for the American Library Association

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

New Books

  • Building Digital Collections: A How-To-Do-It Manual by Terry Reese, Jr. and Kyle Banerjee
  • Essential Guide to Spanish Reading: Librarians' Selections edited by Lluís Agustí

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

New Books

  • Public Library Blogs: 252 Examples by Walt Crawford

FYI: a list of weblogs included in this book is available at http://waltcrawford.name/publiblogs2007.xls

  • SharePoint 2007: The Definitive Guide by James Pyles, Christopher M. Buechler, Bob Fox, Murray Gordon, Michael Lotter, Jason Medero, Nilesh Mehta, Joris Poelmans, Christopher Pragash, Piotr Prussak, & Christopher J. Regan
  • SharePoint 2007 User's Guide: Learning Microsoft's Collaboration and Productivity Platform by Seth Bates and Tony Smith

Monday, January 14, 2008

Journals Added

The Professional Collection has added two new journals. These were subscribed to during the last add period and have finally started arriving. The first is McSweeney's Quarterly Concern. This literary journal began in 1998 and is edited by Dave Eggers. The format is a small hardcover book. The other new title is The CyberSkeptic's Guide to Internet Research. This newsletter contains Web sites, resources, and articles about the Internet for those who wish to be effective and efficient researchers. Both items are available for routing.

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

New Book

  • Magazines for Libraries (16th ed.) edited by Cheryl LaGuardia [created by Bill Katz]

FYI: This is the 2008 edition of this annual publication. Entries include title, ISSN, frequency & price, URL, peer-reviewed status, where indexed, intended audience, etc. Magazine titles are grouped by subject with both title and subject indices. This book is similar to Ulrich's Periodicals Directory, but the scope is limited to materials one might desire in a library. Of note in modern times, zines are also included.