Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Summer Reading or Wedding



I have wanted to write this blog for ages, but never got around to it. I was asked to blog on a collaborative blog about YS issues and other library stuff. Thinking of topics I settled on Summer Reading Programs, SRP, and weddings and how similar they really are together.

I had just finished a gruelling summer reading program, in which I had held @ least two programs a day starting on first day of summer vaca up to labor day. I also organized a Narnia Day, End of summer carnival and a talent show. That summer was 2006 "Paws, Claws, Scales and Tails". I give most of the credit to the the CSLP programming guide. They give you lots and lots of ideas for crafts, games, activities, book lists, it goes on and on and on! I usually don't do any of them straight out. I give it the Tracy Tweak and off we go!

Anyway, I had a few friends getting married or just had gotten married and thought of all the planning it went in for that one special day. Planning for a wedding and planning for summer reading had more in common than I thought.

Timing
Couples usually start planning for a wedding about a year in advance. The CSLP already has the theme for 2009 and 2010. I usually start creating programming ideas about 6/7 months ahead. Not this year b/c I moved and wasn't sure what DC was doing for SR.

Attendance
For a wedding you have a guest list and sometimes more than just one. I had never heard of a b-list, but some friends who were getting married would say well put that couple on the b-list just in case "X" amount of people can't come. For a SRP you have target goals, like we "X" amount of students in the community and sign up 70% of them. With a wedding, if you invite 120 you're hoping to get 100. It's that 80/20 thing. But for SRP's you want as many as you can get.

Invites
People getting married send out save the date cards. Then a few months later you get a thick envelope in the mail with the real invite, RSVP envelope and info about the reception. Librarians, like me, send out letters to schools to remind them of the upcoming SRP. We make school visits to remind the teachers and students to save the date for the SRP kickoff party!

Performers
Weddings can get freaky with performers. Depending on the $$$ they have a DJ or a band, then maybe a quartet for the ceremony and I've seen magicians. To put less stress on the library staff getting performers is great, but this also depends on the budget. You want cheap, but still great. Mr. Malcolm is the best show for your buck. He's a storyteller and really gets the kids involved. He'll do any story you want from Harry Potter to Narnia, from Dora to Thomas the Tank Engine. Toot toot! If you are in a system, you can go in with other branches for performers to cut the cost . Also the system usually will pay for at least one performer. The cheapest way is to draw off the talent of the co-workers. Put together a puppet show and travel to the other branches with it.
Food
The best part of the wedding, for the guest anyway, is the cocktail hour and reception. Yummo! Some couples can really screw this up, but hey it's free! But if you're involved in the wedding or actually getting married, you get to go to tastings! Now this too can be fucked up. What people serve as food is just not right! Beyond the tastings, it comes to the menu. Do you have guests that are vegan? Do they have any severe allergies? Dietary problems? You can't please everyone, but you need to have options for the people who can't eat cheese! Libraries on the other hand go by the motto feed them and they will come. So depending on your budget and food policy providing refreshments is a key way to get participants, especially the teen ones. It's rare, but it indeed does happen where most of your community only can eat certain foods due to religious beliefs or something like it. I worked in a community that had a high population of Orthodox Jewish people. Either I could serve kosher snacks or make sure I had kosher snacks available or not have food or just say WTF and not worry about kosher foods. I tried the second option mostly.
Favors
Once again depending on the budget and interests of the marrying couple, that is how the favors are chosen. I have gotten big bottles of wine, small bottles of wine, candy, flowers, clapper things, snow globes or nothing. Some people don't really believe in favors. It can be an extra cost for something no one really cares about. For all of you reading this I like wine! That's a great favor! I'd settle for beer or any kind of liquor. Libraries have incentives! And like favors, there is a great variety. When you sign up for SR you get a little something; sticker, temp tattoo, a bug (that's this years SRP: Catch The Reading Bug), a bag and so on you get the picture. Some places have raffles if you read "X" amount of books you can be in a raffle. Some raffles happen weekly or the kids have to wait until the end of the summer. Basically we want the kids to read and if the sometimes crappy favors, there are some real cool incentives out there, work great! I'm not below bribing kids to read at first. If they want a temp tattoo for every book so be it!!!

BUDGET
It all comes down to budget, $$$$$$! If you have the dough you're wedding can be in Ireland at a castle and you can fly all your friends and family there. Your food can be done by Bobby Flay and your favors can be cars in all different colors. But real people don't have that kind of $$ and plan their wedding accordingly. I know some do, but who wants to start off their wedded bliss in a crap load of debt. Libraries on the other hand, on average, don't have any $$$. At my previous place in NJ, we had $1200 for the year. Nearly 1/3 is spent right of the bat for crayons and glue sticks and such. So with the leftover, you need to get at least 4 to 5 performers, decorations, food and favors. You don't want to be broke by September either. The library system provides some of the things mentioned, but it just never seems like enough. I have probably spent well over $1000 in food, prizes, decorations and whatever else in the last two years as a librarian. & I can't see that stopping. As long as it makes the kids and teens happy that's all I care about. My SRP has already started for this year and I have spent about $150- 200 already.

I think I've proven how SRP's and weddings are very similar. When my time comes to plan my own wedding I should be set!

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Eclipse


Back in November I was listening to Eclipse by Stephanie Meyer. I had started to blog about it, but didn't finish. I saw that the blog title was still in draft, so I'm going to finish itnow. First, for all the fans I am one too. I've read the other 2 books and will read the fourth coming out this summer. The series are written very well. The plot and characters are clearly defined. I don't have a problem with that. My main concern was the part in Eclipse when Jacob forcibly kissed Bella. She hit him in return. Good Girl! Obviously since he is a werewolf it didn't really hurt, but the hit was still there. I didn't like the way, it seemed to me, that everyone else basically laughed it off or made it seem that she overreacted. Everyone knows how much Jacob loves her and that she just needs to deal. Excuse me!!!!! It reminded me off my friends who were in high school, or friends that I met in college, who had been molested, raped and/or in abusive relationships. The guys would always say, but it's because I like you so much. It's your fault. Or their friends and families would treat the situation like the boy is so nice. He likes you so much. Just give him a chance. The way it was treated at that point in the story, I almost stopped reading it. It made me so angry. I ranted to everyone about it. Teen girls are in these relationships and stay in them, even though they are abusive, b/c they feel/ are told they should. It eats way at your esteem and self-respect. & No, I don't think this is what Stephanie Meyer was thinking/writing about in Eclipse. I highly doubt it. & Yes, especially for a YA book, towards the end of the book Bella kisses Jacob again and realizes she does really love him! Oh no! Should she stay w/ wonderful Edward or go to wild Jacob? If you haven't read Eclipse, I won't tell you how it ends. Did she stay with Ed or go to Jake?


To reiterate, it's a great series, Twilight. The new book, Breaking Dawn, is coming out August 2nd. I'm definitely going to read it. And the Twilight the movie is coming out in December 2008. Cedric Diggory from HP Goblet of Fire is playing Edward. Yum! I'm so going to see it. I personally was angry with one part of one book, but it made me so angry that I really needed to get it out. Thanks for reading!

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Nude Dude


So this morning, I was on Yahoo and saw this kitty, Nude Dude! He just looks mad. He is one pissed off cat. Can you just imagine the jokes he gets from the other cats.
Hey wrinkly! Have problems with hairballs don't ya? Have you called fur club for felines? I saw your owner wearing your fur on her head the other day.
He must have really loving owners. I have had many cats in my life so far. They have all had fur and were so cuddly. I can't imagine Nude Dude is very cuddly. It seems that hugging him would be like hugging my Grandma. She was very soft and wrinkly. Man, look at him! It looks like he will scratch your eyes out. Just give him a reason. Maybe I'll try one of these bald kitties next time I'm looking for a new cat.

Monday, August 13, 2007

ALA in DC

At the end of June I attended the ALA annual conference in DC. Since then I have been working on my report and finally done!! Since my interoffice email is down I'm going to post it! Enjoy!

Day 1

YALSA 101

YALSA 101 was the first program I attended. All of the major ALA sections were having 101 programs for new members or older members who have never attended ALA before. I was expecting YALSA to explain how to pick the right programs to go to, how to figure out the shuttle routes and basically the bare bones of how to have a successful ALA conference. YALSA 101 was not like that at all. There was a panel of speakers, president-elect, leaving president, editor-in-chief of YALS: Young Adult Library Services and the person who is in charge of the YALSA blogsite. They talked about how to get involved with YALSA, how to publish with YALSA and the future of YALSA as they see it. If one wants to get involved with YALSA there is a volunteer form online, http://www.ala.org/ala/yalsa/joinus/committeevolunteer.htm. You fill it out and basically wait to hear back from a YALSA committee member. There are major committees like Best Books for Young Adults or the Printz Awards, but usually a new member does not get on one of those committees right of the bat. There are virtual committees for members who cannot attend conferences or who do not have a lot of time to dedicate to a committee. To publish in YALS or with YALSA there is also a form online, http://www.ala.org/ala/yalsa/yalsapubs/publications.htm. To post or comment on YALSA’s blog you can here http://blogs.ala.org/yalsa.php. This was all good information to have, but not exactly what I needed or expected. YALSA 101 was the only 101 I planned on attended and was a little upset about that.

Hollywood Librarian

I went to the premier showing of the Hollywood Librarian Friday night. While most of the movie was good and interesting, I had some big problems with it. If you don’t know, the Hollywood Librarian is the first full-length documentary film to focus on the work and lives of librarians by combining unique and charming film clips, humor and critical analysis of the popular image of librarians. Well, there was some movie clips that were funny and touching, but not barely enough. There were interviews with professionals from the public, academic and specialized fields of library services. The movie also covered prison libraries, John Steinbeck, library closings and Andrew Carnegie. It mentioned that $250 million federal dollars go to libraries every year, and that is what we spend in Iraq each day. There was a cameo from one of our own staff members, Elsworth Rockefeller! None of these things, while fun, did not have anything to with librarian perceptions in the movies.
Once again my major complaint is that we are preaching to the choir! If this movie is supposed to change peoples minds and open up their eyes to the danger most libraries in with low funding and staff shortages, showing it to librarians is not the way to go. Show it at indie movie film festivals, make copies and have them circulate through the public libraries of America, convince PBS to air it. Let the masses know! During 2007 Banned Book Week Libraries can show this documentary for free (no licensing fee), but must charge audience members to come and see the film. If we are interested in doing this I can sign us up. For more information go to: http://www.hollywoodlibrarian.com/index.html.

Day 2

Babies & Books Beyond the Library: Developing an Early Literacy Campaign

The Brooklyn Public Library a few years ago came up with an early literacy program called First Five Years, http://www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/first5years/. The First Five Years at the Brooklyn Public Library is an inventive plan, which incorporates a variety of early literacy programs and services for children birth through age five. It’s available at all the Brooklyn Public Library’s. They have programs for children as well as their caregivers. Some of the programs are Story Play where babies to the children of five years old learn literacy and social skills through play and Toddler Time in which children from 18 months to 3 years old. Brooklyn also has bedtime story programs, parent workshops, DVD’s about the program, author visits and children concerts. Brooklyn Public showed us snippets from the informational DVD. One of the things from the DVD that stuck with me was to keep reading to children while they wonder. Toddlers multitask! If they start of sitting in your lap listening to you read, then get up and walk around the room, keep reading. It may not seem like it, but they are still listening. If you make them sit still and listen, they will disengage from the book. If you allow them to look at other things or do other things they will still have there engagement with the story. I started thinking about the Head Start storytimes I do and how the three year olds can’t sit still and need to get up. The teachers tell them to sit down and pay attention. All the child is now thinking is when they can get up and do something else. They are no longer engaged in the story.
The Brooklyn Public wanted to get the word out for this new great public service. They spent with gifts, partnerships, sponsors, in-kind support and through their own budget $284,420.00 on promotion. They have giveaways (tote bags, sippy cups, bibs, placemats, etc.), postcards, bookmarks and brochures in six different languages, bus shelter posters and ad placements on the radio and television. Brooklyn had networking breakfasts to let the community heads know what they were doing and asking for their support. They had a huge launching party with food, giveaways, authors and illustrators at all of the 60 branches. The program is a success and growing strong. I have the power point presentation, placemat, brochures, info booklet, booklist and a list of professional articles for librarians who are working with children 0-24 months.
There was another speaker at the program, but only had a few moments to talk due to Brooklyn Public talked for the majority of the time.

YALSA Celebrating Excellence in Audiobooks for Children and Young Adults

I love audiobooks and was extremely excited about this program!! I thought the program would be YALSA and ALSC members, but when entered the room there was an all star panel of Authors. There was Bruce Coville, Judy Blume, John Green and Jack Gantos. I cannot do the presentation justice. All the authors were so wonderful talking about how audiobooks have affected their lives and the way they write. The powers that be podcasted the program and to listen just click here: http://plablog.org/2007/06/celebrating-excellence-in-audiobooks-for-children-and-young-adults.html. Basically they talked about the importance of audiobooks and how now that many are downloadable listening can be a group activity. The moderator of the program talked about the new major ALA book award, the Odyssey award. The Odyssey award is
the best audiobook produced for children and/or young adults available in English in the United States. I’m so excited about this award, and wish to be on the committee one day! I have information about this program and new audiobooks coming out within the next year.

Teen Graphic Novels: Maintaining Your Collection for Maximum Impact

After lunch I decided to go to a Graphic Novel program. As a Children/Tween librarian I thought it would be good to know more about graphic novels. I’ve read them, but don’t really like them as a genre, don’t get me started on Manga. After entering the room and sitting down the moderator said that if you wanted to know about Graphic Novels or great Graphic Novels to read or how to start a Graphic Novel collection this is not the program you want to be in. It was only for maintaining a thriving Graphic Novel collection. That is not at all what I wanted so I left and went to explore the exhibits.



Picture Books for Older Readers

Regardless of the speaker, this program was excellent! I have decided that I want/need to do a program, display, class or series of picture books under the title “Picture Books are Not Just for Babies”. There are some moving, emotional picture books like Walter Dean Myers Patrol: an American Soldier in Vietnam. Another great book is The Middle Passage: White Ships/Black Cargo by Tom Feelings. I cry every time I read it. These are over looked because they are picture books and must be babyish. There are excellent biographies like Starry Messenger about Galileo and Joan of Arc: The Lily Maid. Hard and controversial topics are addressed, in my opinion, sometimes much better in picture book form, like The House that Crack Built and Rose Blanche. The illustrations are so complicated, beautiful, clever and emotional, that a younger audience would not understand or appreciate these books.
The speaker spoke extremely fast and jumped from topic to topic. Her handouts were 13 pages but the first page was nine and the last was eight. She had top picture books separated by the year they were published, but covered them by topic. I could not keep up with her. I do have the booklist as well as a listing of good books and articles recommended on picture books for older children and teens. She also did comment that people in the know thought that w/ the publication of The Invention of Hugo Cabret was going to be the hands-down best book of 2007 incorporating illustrations and text in a brand new way, but there is book, which came from Australia, titled The Arrival which will rock the way we read books. I have a galley of The Arrival if anyone wants to read it!

Day 3

YALSA YA Author Breakfast

This was very exciting too!!! I thought there were only going to be a few authors there but I was wrong. 22 authors including Walter Dean Myers, Lois Lowry, Chris Crutcher and MT Anderson. The way it worked was you sat at a table and the authors would go from table to table, like speed dating, for about 5 minutes. Each table should have seen about 10-15 authors each, but it didn’t work that way. First Jack Gantos was supposed to start at my table, but was late and confused and went to another table. Instead of the authors moving down a vertical line some went horizontal or in order that only made sense to them. These are teen and children authors after all. After getting skipped a few times people at my table went and stole authors from other tables, flagged them down or waved money in the air to seduce them into coming over to us. The authors that sat with us were Carolyn Mackler (The Earth, My Butt and Other Big Round Things), Jack Gantos (Hole in My Life), Gene Luen Yang (American Born Chinese), Sonya Harnett (Surrender), Garret Frymann-Weyr (My Heartbeat) and Walter Dean Myers (Monster) shook our hands. Here is a podcast of the breakfast http://blogs.ala.org/yalsa.php?cat=171 and photos as well
http://www.flickr.com/photos/yalsa/.

ALA Annual Conference Fall 2007 Preview

Random House had a promo-program for all of their elite children and teen titles coming out in the fall of 2007. They make each and everyone sound great, but I can’t tell you about them all so here are a few that I can’t wait to read! Mind Your Manners, B.B. Wolf by Judy Sierra, who brought us Wild About Books. BB Wolf is invited to tea at the library and needs to behave. He makes up a song about having fun, but not biting anyone. When Randolph Turned Rotten in this picture book Randolph’s best friend gets invited to a party and he does not. Instead of being happy for his friend Randolph turns nasty. In the end he realizes that you need to be happy and supportive for your friends even when things did not go well for you. The Hound of Rowan is like a Harry Potter meets X-men! Definitely a great read for boys and reluctant readers. Max is living in the suburbs when he discovers a Celtic tapestry and whole other world. This is the first in the trilogy. Taken is the new book by Edward Bloor. In 2035 children are taken on a regular basis and their families have 24 hours to live, but we come in with Charity Meyers only having 12 hours to go. There is a family secret and who really wanted her taken? Before I Die is a story about 16 year old Tessa. She is dying of cancer. She makes a list of things she wants to do before she dies. Of course on the top of a 16 year olds dying list is to have sex. Does she? Is it really what she thought it would be? What else is on the list? Last but not least is Love, Stargirl. Stargirl is one of those people we all had the courage to be. She leaves her first book, narrated by her boyfriend Leo, dancing into the night. In Love, Stargirl it turns out her parents moved to Pennsylvania and the girl herself narrates. I have the new book packet if anyone wants to have a look.

Exhibits

I spent the rest of the day hitting exhibits! There were over 4000 vendors at the convention center to see. I came up with a plan. There were people outside handing coupon books for the exhibits on Friday. Friday night I went through the book and pulled out entry forms and free giveaways for the booths that looked interesting. Also at registration, each person was a YALSA Teen Read Week Passport. You needed to go to all of the booths in the passport book and get a sticker that says “I support Teen Read Week”. Once your passport book is full, you presented it to a YALSA member at their booth and were then entered into a raffle. I did not win anything for OCL, but hopefully they will send us free promo stuff for Teen Read Week 2007. So armed with my coupons and the passport I made my way through most of the vendors. It took me two days to finish. Some of the useful things I did pick-up were guides to using graphic novels in the classroom (or library), Choose Your Own Adventure fall 2007 catalog, booktalk postcards for some new and great books (like Clementine, Rules and Life as We Knew It), first chapter teasers (like Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians) and comic books signed by the authors! I did win three books and a nylon backpack from Newmarket Press. They do, along with other things, novels based on screenplays. They sent me the novel Gracie based on the movie that came out June 1st with a backpack to match. The other books are The New Totally Awesome Business Book for Kids and The New Totally Awesome Money Book for Kids. These books are on my desk and will be moved shortly into the book giveaway cabinet. I picked-up flyers, bags, giveaways, galleys and lots lots more. I’m a sucker for free stuff.

Day 4

Best Books for Young Adults 2008

I thought this program was going to be the BBYA committee talking about the best YA books for 2008. The nominations why they are so good, but that was not the case. There was a list of the books and table displays of the books and the committee was going to be discussing these books, but to each other like in a debate, not too the audience. I could have sat there silently and listen to the committee discuss the books or leave. I left with the list.

How to be Popular and Smart! YALSA’s Popular Paperback List

This was the perfect way to end the conference. A panel of present and former Popular Paperbacks discussed their favorite lists. I love the process the committee uses. They will not re-use the same list genre for like seven years or repeat the same title on the list for about the same time period. The list shapes the kinds of books chosen, but then the books shape the title of the list. For example in 2005 two of the lists are “Own Your Freak” and “All Kinds of Creepy”. “Own Your Freak” started out as outcast books, but turned into a list about embracing your individuality and loving them! “All Kinds of Creepy” was supposed to be about horror books, but what is scary to one may not be to another. In 2007 a list humorous paperbacks is titled “What’s So Funny?” for the same reason. I am keen on the “Get Creative” list from 2007. There is mixture of non-fiction hobby books and fictional books that have hobbies as the leading force in them. Generation T: 108 Ways to Transform a T-Shirt is a book that I have put on hold and a program I’m dying to do with my Tween clubs. Chicks with Sticks (It’s a Purl Thing) is a book about four unlikely friends who met while taking beginning knitting at a yarn store. I would like to have a series of programs where I teach girls to knit while we discuss the book.


This is the end of my ALA tale. I had tons of fun and hope to incorporate many of the things I learned into OCL programming.

Friday, June 08, 2007

A Little Disturbing

I realize that I have issues. One of my many issues is that I love dirty, hardcore, bitter songs. Songs that are extremely disturbing usually have a great beat and a catchy lyrics. This song is a great example. It's by Nickelback, which was surprising to me when I found that out. The song is ... Figured You Out! Here ya go! Enjoy!!

Figured You Out
I like your pants around your feet
And I like the dirt that's on your knees
And I like the way you still say please
While you're looking up at me
You're like my favorite damn disease
And I love the places that we go
And I love the people that you know
And I love the way you can't say No
Too many long lines in a row
I love the powder on your nose
And now I know who you are
It wasn't that hard
Just to figure you out
(Now I did, you wonder why)
And now I know who you are
It wasn't that hard
Just to figure you out
(Now I did, you wonder why)
I like the freckles on your chest
And I like the way you like me best
And I like the way you're not impressed
While you put me to the test
I like the white stains on your dress
I love the way you pass the check
And I love the good times that you wreck
And I love your lack of self respect
While you're passed out on the deck
I love my hands around your neck
And now I know who you are
It wasn't that hard
Just to figure you out
(Now I did, you wonder why)
And now I know who you are
It wasn't that hard
Just to figure you out
Now I did, you wonder why
Why not before, you never tried
Gone for good, and this is it
I like your pants around your feet
And I like the dirt that's on your knees
And I like the way you still say please
While you're looking up at me
You're like my favorite damn disease
And I hate the places that we go
And I hate the people that you know
And I hate the way you can't say No
Too many long lines in a row
I hate the powder on your nose
And now I know who you are
It wasn't that hard
Just to figure you out
(Now I did, you wonder why)
And now I know who you are
It wasn't that hard
Just to figure you out
Now I did, you wonder why
Why not before, you never tried
Gone for good, and this is it

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

I Wear the Pants

I have been listening to the new Avril CD lately and really love it! My one and only problem with the CD is that most of the songs are extremely similar! My friend says it's like that 80's cheerleader rock. They have great beats and fun lyrics, but sound the same. Don't get me wrong I like the songs & here are my favorites after "Girlfriend":
Best Damn Thing
( I Love this one)
Let me hear you say hey hey hey
Alright Now let me hear you say hey hey ho
I hate it when a guy doesn't get the door
even though I told him yesterday and the day before
I hate it when a guy doesn't get the tab
And I have to pull my money out and that looks bad
Where are the hopes, where are the dreams
My Cinderella story scene
When do you think they'll finally see
[Chorus:]That you're not not not gonna get any better
You won't won't won't you won't get rid of me never
Like it or not, even though she's a lot like me
We're not the same
And yeah yeah yeah I'm a lot to handle
You don't know trouble, I'm a hell of a scandal
Me, I'm a scene, I'm a drama queen
I'm the best damn thing that your eyes have ever seen
Alright, alright
Yeah I hate it when a guy doesn't understand
Why a certain time of month I don't wanna hold his hand
I hate it when they go out, and we stay in
And they come home smelling like their ex girlfriends
I found my hopes, I found my dreams
My Cinderella story scene
Now everybody's gonna see
[Chorus]
Give me an A (always give me what I want)
Give me a V (be very very good to me)
R (are you gonna treat me right)
I (I can put up a fight)
Give me an L (let me hear you scream loud)
One, two, three, four
Where are the hopes, where are the dreams
My Cinderella story scene
When do you think they'll finally see
[Chorus]
Let me hear you say hey hey hey
Alright
Now let me hear you say hey hey ho
Hey hey hey
Hey hey hey
Hey hey hey
I'm the best damn thing that your eyes have ever seen
Now here is the 2nd song!! The intro is the best!Here are the lyrics!
I Don't Have To Try
I'm the one, I'm the one who knows the dance
I'm the one, I'm the one who's got the prance
I'm the one, I'm the one who wears the pants
I wear the pants
I'm the one who tells you what to do
You're the one, you're the one if I let you
I'm the one, I'm the one who wears the pants
I wear the pants
Hey you, follow me I'll take the lead
Can't you see
Don't you question me
You just do what I say
I don't care what you're saying
I don't care what you're thinking
I don't care about anything
Get ready, get ready cause I'm happening
I don't care what you're saying
I don't care what you're thinking
I don't care about anything
Get ready, get ready cause I'm on the scene
[Chorus]
I don't have to try
To make you realize
Anything I wanna do, anything I'm gonna do
Anything I wanna do I do
And I don't have to try
Don't you disagree
Cause you know it's all about me
Be at my beck and call
I'm a know-it-all
And it's all your fault
I don't care what you're saying
I don't care what you're thinking
I don't care about anything
Get ready, get ready cause I'm happening
I don't care what you're saying
I don't care what you're thinking
I don't care about anything
Get ready, get ready cause I'm on the scene
[Chorus X2]
Don't have to try

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Library 2.0: Great or Evil?

Library 2.0 overall is a going to be a wonderful thing. It will bring libraries into the 21st century! To give a little back story, Library 2.0 evolved from Web 2.0. Web 2.0 is all about open source, social software and virtual networking. You maybe familiar with Blogs, Wikis, MySpace and Podcasting, these all fall under Web 2.0. Libraries are taking these ideas and bringing it to the customers. I really liked the definition of Library 2.0 found on the blog 11 reasons why Library 2.0 exists and matters, which was a re-quote taken from Sarah Houghton's blog, basically saying Library 2.0 makes your virtual library’s space interactive, collaborative and catering more to your community needs.

There are wonderful things I'm going to love about Library 2.0. One is the interactive aspect. Library customers will be able to leave their own reviews on the latest book, CD or movie they just read, listened to or saw. Any person with Internet access can go on Amazon to read reviews from some stranger, but I think it carries more weight when they see a review from someone in their own community. Teens can blog with each other about the latest video game or CD on the libraries site from their home or any other computer with Internet access. Presently teens who want to blog need to go to the library and have the teen librarian give them access. Tweens can write up their own "If you liked this read this..." or "What to read next..." lists. Children maybe more willing to read if they hear about these from children instead of crazy librarians. It is all about the word of mouth. It can only boost circulation! We all know what Oprah's books did.

Integrating OPACs will also be amazing. ILL can be a laborious task, but if the customer in NJ sees that the book they want is in PA they can request it immediately. I never thought about this until I read about it in one of Blyberg's blogs, but uniting libraries we can compete against monsters like Google and Amazon.

Challenges that libraries will cross are more internal and primarily only hellish to the IT departments. Granting customers access to make changes, comments and reviews on the library's site can be problematic. Viruses and security can become more of an issue. I do not think the changes will be extremely expensive, but there will be expenses nonetheless. Libraries pride themselves with being better than other libraries, better services, programs more borrowing materials. They will be reluctant to share and combine forces.

I say that for those against Library 2.0 or thinks that Library 2.0 is a passing phase better wake-up! It will happen! It is happening! And those dragging their feet will be left behind with the card catalog.